查看原文
其他

WeChat in Racism Storm, Translates 'Black Foreigner' into N-Word

2017-10-11 ThatsBeijing

       

WeChat is facing backlash over its translation software.

Recently, users discovered that the software translates "黑老外" ("hei laowai" or "black foreigner") to the N-word, a deeply offensive racial epithet.

The inappropriate translation was first brought to our attention by local Shanghai theater producer Ann James, who posted about it on WeChat Moments earlier today.



We tested out the translation in the iOS app for Apple devices and found that it indeed produced the N-word, albeit sporadically. In some cases the phrase simply translated to "foreigner" or "black foreigner." But in other cases, in particular when combined with a negative adjective (see below, right), the phrase translated to the N-word.



Translation tests revealed different software providers depending on the context of the phrase in use. If the phrase was sent via Chat or Moments and produced a neutral translation, WeChat in most cases revealed that the translation was provided by Microsoft Translator:



But if the phrases we tested were translated into the N-word, no official translator was named:



Many larger platforms such as WeChat, Twitter, Yelp, Trip Advisor and Foursquare use the Microsoft Translator API for quick, multi-language translations of user generated content.

When we tested translations on both Bing Translator and Microsoft's Neural Machine Translation system, however, we didn't get the same results as we did on WeChat. The same phrases that turned out more negative translations on WeChat instead automatically generated neutral versions on Microsoft:



It's unclear where exactly WeChat's controversial independent translations came from. That's has reached out to WeChat for further clarification.

The messaging app has over 900 million monthly active users.


You May Also Like...


12 Amazing WeChat Features You Might Not Know About

Russia Blocks WeChat, China’s Most Popular Social Media App
WeChat Stickers 'Should Be Regulated,' Say Chinese State Media


For more China news, click "Read more"(阅读原文) below.


您可能也对以下帖子感兴趣

文章有问题?点此查看未经处理的缓存