I would be interested if other readers have experienced similarly innocent linguistic peculiarities. Google's original explanation for this phenomenon to Reuters went as follows: "We filter potentially offensive or inappropriate results because we want to avoid situations whereby we might misrecognize a spoken query and return profanity when, in fact, the user said something completely innocent." However, "Best Little Whorehouse in Texas" was a vast no-no. And if you're wondering what other works of literature might have been made a hash of by Android, well, you may be relieved to hear that "Lady Chatterley's Lover" enjoyed no censorship. "Incest" was hashed, but "bestiality" was fine.
BESTIALITY TEEN ANDROID
Do I get my phone service terminated if I get too many #'s?"Īny fear he might have experienced quickly dissolved as he began to delve further into the Android underworld. "The arbitrariness of it bothers me as an American and as a curious person. "I wonder how many # words there are," Hillyard told me in an e-mail. Hillyard and the Lolita search on his Droid. "Scum" and "Scumbag" appeared to encounter a huge hash of resistance, although the second time he tried "Scumbag," he got "Futurama" (the cartoon).
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However, "Oh, Come All Ye Faithful" became "Oklahoma, All Ye Faithful," followed by "# All Ye Faithful." So, encouraged by my own curiosity, he delved further. This seemed strangely picky of the software, especially as Hillyard told me he tried the search after enjoying "Reading Lolita in Tehran," a book that itself wonders what should be acceptable and what not. Hillyard was surprised to find that a search for "Nabokov Lolita" became "Nabokov #" when transcribed by Google Voice (safe search was switched off). And I am particularly grateful to Zechariah-Aloysius Hillyard from Boston who put his Droid and his patience through their paces in the quest for, well, accursed freedom. CNET's readers are nothing if not disturbingly intelligent.
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This appears, however, not to have been the half of it. Should you have missed this purely puritan entertainment, words such as the very common one beginning with an "f" were being censored by the built-in voice-to-text feature found on Google's mobile operating system. It seems like only yesterday that news surfaced that naughty words were being replaced by hash marks on Android phones.