Entities
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CSETv0 Taxonomy Classifications
Taxonomy DetailsProblem Nature
Specification
Physical System
Software only
Level of Autonomy
High
Nature of End User
Amateur
Public Sector Deployment
No
Data Inputs
photographs, images, multi-media content
GMF Taxonomy Classifications
Taxonomy DetailsKnown AI Goal Snippets
(Snippet Text: Google has been forced to apologise after its image recognition software mislabelled photographs of black people as gorillas.
, Related Classifications: Image Tagging)
CSETv1 Taxonomy Classifications
Taxonomy DetailsIncident Number
16
Notes (special interest intangible harm)
The google image tagging feature of the Google Photos app mislabeled black people as gorillas.
Special Interest Intangible Harm
yes
Date of Incident Year
2015
Date of Incident Month
06
Date of Incident Day
29
CSETv1_Annotator-1 Taxonomy Classifications
Taxonomy DetailsIncident Number
16
Special Interest Intangible Harm
yes
Date of Incident Year
2015
Date of Incident Month
6
Date of Incident Day
29
Estimated Date
No
CSETv1_Annotator-2 Taxonomy Classifications
Taxonomy DetailsIncident Number
16
AI Tangible Harm Level Notes
No tangible harm
Notes (special interest intangible harm)
The google image tagging feature of the Google Photos app mislabeled black people as gorillas.
Special Interest Intangible Harm
yes
Date of Incident Year
2015
Date of Incident Month
06
Incident Reports
Reports Timeline
- View the original report at its source
- View the report at the Internet Archive
Google has removed the 'gorilla' tag from its new Photos app, after a user noticed it had filed a number of photos of him and his black friend in an automatically generated album named 'gorillas'.
The affected user, computer programmer Jack…
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- View the report at the Internet Archive
Google’s image recognition algorithm is labelling photos of black people as gorillas and putting them into a special album.
The automatic recognition software is intended to spot characteristics of photos and sort them together — so that al…
- View the original report at its source
- View the report at the Internet Archive
Mr Alcine tweeted Google about the fact its app had misclassified his photo
Google says it is "appalled" that its new Photos app mistakenly labelled a black couple as being "gorillas".
Its product automatically tags uploaded pictures using …
- View the original report at its source
- View the report at the Internet Archive
Google Photos uses sophisticated facial-recognition software to identify not only individuals, but also specific categories of objects and photo types, like food, cats and skylines.
Image recognition programs are far from perfect, however; …
- View the original report at its source
- View the report at the Internet Archive
Google has come under fire recently for an objectively racist “glitch” found in its new Photos application for iOS and Android that is identifying black people as "gorillas."
In theory, Photos is supposed to act like an intelligent digital …
- View the original report at its source
- View the report at the Internet Archive
Google has apologized after its new photo app labelled two black people as “gorillas”.
The photo service, launched in May, automatically tags uploaded pictures using its own artificial intelligence software.
“Google Photos, y’all fucked up.…
- View the original report at its source
- View the report at the Internet Archive
Google has been forced to apologise after its image recognition software mislabelled photographs of black people as gorillas.
The internet giant's new Google Photos application uses an auto-tagging feature to help organise images uploaded t…
- View the original report at its source
- View the report at the Internet Archive
Story highlights Google Photos tagged an African-American man's pictures of him and a friend as "Gorillas"
He highlighted the problem on Twitter, drawing the attention of a Google engineer
(CNN) When Jacky Alcine looked at his Google Photos…
- View the original report at its source
- View the report at the Internet Archive
Google has said it is "genuinely sorry" after its image recognition software labelled photographs of a black couple as "gorillas".
The Google Photos application, launched in May, uses an automatic tagging tool to help organise uploaded imag…
- View the original report at its source
- View the report at the Internet Archive
Google is a leader in artificial intelligence and machine learning. But the company’s computers still have a lot to learn, judging by a major blunder by its Photos app this week.
The app tagged two black people as “Gorillas,” according to J…
- View the original report at its source
- View the report at the Internet Archive
Google launched its Photos app at Google I/O in May. Here staffers wait to check in conference attendees at the Moscone Center in San Francisco. (Photo: Jeff Chiu, Associated Press)
SAN FRANCISCO — Google has apologized after its new Photos…
- View the original report at its source
- View the report at the Internet Archive
Google has come under fire after the image-recognition feature in its Photos application mistakenly identified people with dark skin as "gorillas."
Jacky Alciné of New York City tweeted a picture of himself and a friend on Sunday that the a…
- View the original report at its source
- View the report at the Internet Archive
Google was quick to respond over the weekend to a user after he tweeted that the new Google Photos app had mis-categorized a photo of him and his friend in an unfortunate and offensive way.
Jacky Alciné, a Brooklyn computer programmer of Ha…
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- View the report at the Internet Archive
When Brooklyn-native Jacky Alcine logged onto Google Photos on Sunday evening, he was shocked to find an album titled “Gorillas,” in which the facial recognition software categorized him and his friend as primates. Immediately, Alcine poste…
- View the original report at its source
- View the report at the Internet Archive
Google continued to apologize Wednesday for a flaw in Google Photos, which was released to great fanfare in May, that led the new application to mistakenly label photos of black people as “gorillas.”
The company said it had fixed the proble…
- View the original report at its source
- View the report at the Internet Archive
When Jacky Alciné checked his Google Photos app earlier this week, he noticed it labeled photos of himself and a friend, both black, as “gorillas.”
The Brooklyn programmer posted his screenshots to Twitter to call out the app’s faulty photo…
- View the original report at its source
- View the report at the Internet Archive
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Google had a major PR disaster on its hands thanks to …
- View the original report at its source
- View the report at the Internet Archive
In 2015, Google drew criticism when its Photos image recognition system mislabeled a black woman as a gorilla—but two years on, the problem still isn’t properly fixed. Instead, Google has censored image tags relating to many primates.
What’…
- View the original report at its source
- View the report at the Internet Archive
In 2015, a black software developer embarrassed Google by tweeting that the company’s Photos service had labeled photos of him with a black friend as “gorillas.” Google declared itself “appalled and genuinely sorry.” An engineer who became …
- View the original report at its source
- View the report at the Internet Archive
It’s been over two years since engineer Jacky Alciné called out Google Photos for auto-tagging black people in his photos as “gorillas.” After being called out, Google promptly and profusely apologized, promising it’d fix the problems in th…
- View the original report at its source
- View the report at the Internet Archive
Two years later, Google solves 'racist algorithm' problem by purging 'gorilla' label from image classifier
In 2015, a black software developer named Jacky Alciné revealed that the image classifier used by Google Photos was labeling black pe…
- View the original report at its source
- View the report at the Internet Archive
Google’s ‘immediate action’ over AI labelling of black people as gorillas was simply to block the word, along with chimpanzee and monkey, reports suggest
This article is more than 1 year old
This article is more than 1 year old
After Google…
- View the original report at its source
- View the report at the Internet Archive
tech2 News Staff
Do you remember the time when Google’s image recognition algorithm created a major controversy after it categorised a black couple as “Gorillas”?
If you don’t then we don’t blame you as this actually happened back in July 2…
- View the original report at its source
- View the report at the Internet Archive
Eight years after a controversy over Black people being mislabeled as gorillas by image analysis software — and despite big advances in computer vision — tech giants still fear repeating the mistake.
When Google released its stand-alone Pho…
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