Apple says it worked with a glitch after some iPhone users noticed that the word “text” before the “racist.”
Confusion and hostility from conservative conservatives, including host host to Infowars and conspiracy theorists Alex JonesGrowing online after a user of the GUNTO called part in a video posted last week. Some of social media since printing themselves trying the glitch.
Many NBC news reporters have made the same trend over multiple iPhone devices. If the voice feature is activated and says the word “racist,” the text result will show “Trump” before replacing “racist.” However, not all attempts result in glitch.
“We know an issue with the modeling model of spoken power to dictate and we surround a fix today,” a spokesman of a statement on Tuesday.
A spokesman for the White House does not immediately respond to a request for commentary.
Apple said sometimes, the model of the language recognition of the first manifestation of words with additional analysis intending to speak. The tech company says the bug is wrong suggesting “Trump” in response to many words that include a “R” consonant.
Apple glitch is the latest instance of a major technology company accused of political bias.
In the last month, Meta faces backlash More users claim that its social platforms have increased President Donald Trump and his administration after his inauguration. Users reveal the alarm after determining them as made to automatically follow the new Pages of Trump and Vice President JD. However, Meta says it is part of the company’s usual behavior during the President’s transfers.
Meta too Complaints resolved Regarding Instagram showing the constraints when the hashtag #democrat is looking for, claiming it’s an issue that affects “a different hashtags on Instagram – not just left.”
In September, Amazon said it healed an error caused by virtual assistant Alexa to Provide different answers If asked to provide reasons to vote for Trump Vers Democratic President Nominee Kamala Harris.
If Trump asked about, Alexa was reported to refuse to “give content that promotes a specific political party or a specified candidate.” But when Harris asked about Harris, the assistant occasionally provides a detailed list of reasons that the candidate supported.