People With Commonly Autocorrected Names Call For Tech Firms To Fix Problem (theguardian.com) 103
An anonymous reader quotes a report from The Guardian: People whose names get mangled by autocorrect have urged technology companies to fix the problem faster, with one person whose name gets switched to "Satan" saying: "I am tired of it." People with Irish, Indian and Welsh names are among those calling for improvements to the systems that operate on phones and computers as part of the "I am not a typo" campaign. "It is important that technology becomes more inclusive," said Savan-Chandni Gandecha, 34, a British Indian content creator whose name, which means monsoon moonlight, has been autocorrected to Satan. "My name has also been corrected to Savant," he said. "It is sometimes corrected to Savan, or the hyphen is not accepted by online forms and that irks me," he said. "Even in India my name gets corrected to "Sawan", and it's not just an English issue. It's a multi-language thing."
The campaign has estimated that four out of 10 names of babies born in England and Wales in 2021 were deemed "wrong" or "not accepted" when tested on Microsoft's English dictionary. Dhruti Shah, a journalist, has backed the campaign after seeing her name autocorrected to "Dirty" and "Dorito". She said: "My first name isn't even that long -- only six characters -- but yet when it comes up as an error or it's mangled and considered an unknown entity, it's like saying that it's not just your name that's wrong, but you are." The campaign group -- established by a group of people working in the creative industries in London -- wrote an open letter to technology companies, which pointed out that between 2017 and 2021, 2,328 people named Esmae were born, compared with 36 Nigels. Esmae gets autocorrected to Admar, while Nigel is unchanged. "There are so many diverse names in the global majority but autocorrect is western- and white-focused," said Gandecha. Rashmi Dyal-Chand, a professor at Northeastern University in the US whose name is sometimes corrected to Sashimi, is supporting the latest campaign and said: "For people with names like mine, autocorrect is not convenient and helpful. It is unhelpful. And yes -- it is harmful."
"We all increasingly rely on smartphones, tablets, word processors, and apps that use autocorrect. Yet autocorrect incorporates a set of defaults -- including dictionaries -- that help some of its users to communicate seamlessly at the expense of others who cannot."
Karen Fox, whose children are called Eoin and Niamh, said of autocorrect: "The red line bothers me -- I didn't choose the 'wrong' name for my child. Tech companies update dictionaries with slang all the time and I think it should be an easy thing to do and definitely a priority."
The campaign has estimated that four out of 10 names of babies born in England and Wales in 2021 were deemed "wrong" or "not accepted" when tested on Microsoft's English dictionary. Dhruti Shah, a journalist, has backed the campaign after seeing her name autocorrected to "Dirty" and "Dorito". She said: "My first name isn't even that long -- only six characters -- but yet when it comes up as an error or it's mangled and considered an unknown entity, it's like saying that it's not just your name that's wrong, but you are." The campaign group -- established by a group of people working in the creative industries in London -- wrote an open letter to technology companies, which pointed out that between 2017 and 2021, 2,328 people named Esmae were born, compared with 36 Nigels. Esmae gets autocorrected to Admar, while Nigel is unchanged. "There are so many diverse names in the global majority but autocorrect is western- and white-focused," said Gandecha. Rashmi Dyal-Chand, a professor at Northeastern University in the US whose name is sometimes corrected to Sashimi, is supporting the latest campaign and said: "For people with names like mine, autocorrect is not convenient and helpful. It is unhelpful. And yes -- it is harmful."
"We all increasingly rely on smartphones, tablets, word processors, and apps that use autocorrect. Yet autocorrect incorporates a set of defaults -- including dictionaries -- that help some of its users to communicate seamlessly at the expense of others who cannot."
Karen Fox, whose children are called Eoin and Niamh, said of autocorrect: "The red line bothers me -- I didn't choose the 'wrong' name for my child. Tech companies update dictionaries with slang all the time and I think it should be an easy thing to do and definitely a priority."
Karen needs to learn to use her technology (Score:1, Flamebait)
The feature already exists, add their name to your local spell check library. It's been like this for decades. My last name gets the red "misspelled" line too, never bothered me, but I'm not a snowflake.
Re:Edgelord makes a lot of assumptions (Score:5, Insightful)
Can you add your name to the local spell check library for every device or web-form you have no control of?
Didn't think so.
Re: (Score:3, Insightful)
I don't want my dictionaries cluttered with every name in the Universe just because someone is "tired" of the fact that his name is close to some word in another language. I'm perfectly capable of handling the autocorrect changing the occasional "Saddam" to "serum", and I definitely don't want to see "Dhruti" pop up instead of "dirty" when I misspell the latter as "drity" on the train.
Re: Edgelord makes a lot of assumptions (Score:5, Funny)
I mean the obvious solution seems to be to change everyone's name to Dorito.
Re: Edgelord makes a lot of assumptions (Score:4, Funny)
Re: (Score:3)
The obvious solution is to disable autocorrect and manually approve its suggestions.
Re: (Score:2)
But but but if I disable it, how will I get suggestions :)
Re: (Score:1)
It will be "Suggestions" rather than "Autocorrection"
Re: (Score:2)
Re: (Score:2)
My autocorrect has been changing him to Mr. Duckling since the first time I wrote to him. Kinda cute.
Re: (Score:2)
You guys are reminding me of an old A&W Rootbeer commercial [youtu.be] - that, at the time, I was surprised made it to air.
Re: (Score:2)
Yeah, I've had people who come to be interviewed, who mispronounce my name badly. I don't mind, although it shows certain lack of attention to detail.
Re: (Score:2)
The simple solution would be for auto-correct features to check if a spelling is listed as a word first, then if it's listed as a name, and if neither, correct it to a word since that remains the most likely intent.
Re: (Score:2)
A simpler solution would be to disable automatic auto-correct when the first letter of a word is capitalized. I mean, you could still show suggestions, but don't auto-correct.
Re: (Score:2)
Unfortunately some languages, eg. German, capitalizes ALL nouns whether names or not.
Re: Edgelord makes a lot of assumptions (Score:2)
Re: (Score:2)
It wouldn't be difficult to have name entry fields set a flag that enables a special dictionary of names, and disables auto-correcting to random non-name words, or to names that are unlikely to be correct like Satan.
Re: (Score:3)
What "name entry fields" on the keyboard input of my phone, where the conversion ACTUALLY takes place, which is what the edgelord is complaining about.
Plus, who is he to say "Satan" isn't a proper name? I'm sure there's at least a few people who are called that. What should they do, start complaining about their names being changed to "Samarendra" or something?
Re: Edgelord makes a lot of assumptions (Score:1)
Re: Edgelord makes a lot of assumptions (Score:1)
The issue is HER PHONE, that is what's flagging the misspelling/substitution, not the applications she access thru her phone, but you knew that, right?
Do you really imagine every application/website has its own spellcheck for all user-enteral fields? Really?
Re: (Score:3)
I'll just quote something from the Guardian article since it's obvious you didn't actually read the ./ article or the one in The Guardian:
TL;DR: You piled on more assumptions about what you believe the issue is and how people use techno
Re: (Score:2)
Re: (Score:2)
Yawn. It's still her phone
Which her are you referring to? There were 3 people mentioned in the article: Savan-Chandni Gandecha, Dhruti Shah or Rashmi Dyal-Chand who happens to be a man. Go back and read the article again, plus phones was just one of several devices or technologies mentioned.
The spell-checker on her phone can be easily taught to learn her name.
What about someone else who needs to take down a name? Are they even allowed to add words to the dictionary on a company-computer? If the latter sounds dumb, you'd be surprised how stupid some of the IT-policies some corporations enforce.
Re: (Score:2)
Re: (Score:2)
Karen huh? Seems you didn't like that I pointed out your flawed assumptions so you had to resort to name-calling. How very immature.
I'll also note that you don't know what a "Karen" is.
Speaking of assumptions (Score:2)
The Guardian appears bereft of competent editors (thought... do the same people own them as own /. ? hmm...)
No, "we all" don't. That's one of the first things I turn off in system prefs of whatever device/software — computer, phone, pad, word processor, etc. I leave it off. Predictive suggestions are fine; that can be a timesaver. Altering what I typed... no thanks.
I'm not the only one on the planet's surf
Re: (Score:2)
No, "we all" don't.
So you don't use "smartphones, tablets, word processors, and apps" at all?
Interesting.
Oh, you thought "we all" referred to using autocorrect on those devices? It didn't, it referred to relying on devices that have autocorrect - there is a distinction there. Plus, "we all" was used colloquiality in the sense that everyone who live and work in modern society uses an electronic device. Context matters.
I'm not the only one on the planet's surface who sports better than rudimentary spelling skills and can hit the keys (virtual or otherwise) I aim at. Most of the time, anyway. Plus, there's that whole "read before you publish" process.
Sure, but the thing is that not everyone is like you or in your situation. If you judge the world and people o
Re: (Score:2)
How hard would it be to just turn off auto-correct when you capitalize the first letter?
Re: (Score:2)
Tody is Thirsday, tomorrow is Fruday Ii believe. Haev you ever been to the Gloden Gvate Beidge? Did you know that the chief engineer during the construction of that bridge was Nr Josepj Straiss? Anther fact about the bridge is that in 1983 the FBO foiled a plot to kill Ween Elsbeth IiI by dropping an object on onto her royal yacht when it passed underneath the bridge. Suonds very plebian considering how people was assassinated during the Niddle Agesss.
Sometimes simple ideas work, other times they don't. The
Re: (Score:2)
BTW, if you try to find misspelled names, why would you think Satan is a proper name?
Re:Karen needs to learn to use her technology (Score:5, Insightful)
Disagree. For a long time it was commonly accepted wisdom that you do not run spellcheck on names. Ie, words that are capitalized. Because it is impossible for a spellchecker to know how to spell a proper name. Is it Karen, Karin, Karren, Karyn, Caryn, Charon, or...? Spellcheckers (ie, last couple of years) make absolutely STUPID mistakes, trying to convert Indian names to a similar European spelling or other idiocy. Whereas go back a few more years and no spellcheckers ever bothered to attempt the impossible task.
It should never by my responsibility to add the contents of the corporate directory into the spell check as names to ignore. I don't know in advance what names I might type into an email or document. And I should not have to know this in advance. Modern spell checkers do NOT ask if their spelling is correct, they just go ahead and change the word, which is sometimes difficult to notice.
The rules are simple, no need for AI: 1) if a word has a capital letter or a number in it, then don't attempt to spellcheck it. 2) If in doubt, don't change what I typed, because you the developer of the spellchecker do not know more than I do what I meant to do. 3) If you want to spellcheck more aggressively, then this should be opt-in by the user and not the default setting.
Re: Karen needs to learn to use her technology (Score:5, Insightful)
Sometimes modern spell checkers change the word after youâ(TM)ve entered the next word or two in the sentence, so youâ(TM)re not even looking at it to notice it changed. I have to proof read a lot more than a used to.
Re: (Score:2)
Yup, I've seen that. It's like having clippy around except that clippy at least asked if you wanted help before he screwed things up.
Re: (Score:2)
I've encountered that a lot. It's extremely annoying, as I type quite quickly, but check when I hit the last letter, so I don't see it when I keep typing.
Re: Karen needs to learn to use her technology (Score:4, Funny)
I have to proof read a lot more than a used to.
And apparently you still have some way to go ;-)
Re: (Score:2)
You're right! Thanks ;)
Re: (Score:2)
Never mind if you're a polyglot, with polyglot friends, mixing multiple languages within one piece of text. Autocorrect makes writing anything a real bane...
Re: (Score:2)
Disagree. For a long time it was commonly accepted wisdom that you do not run spellcheck on names. Ie, words that are capitalized. Because it is impossible for a spellchecker to know how to spell a proper name.
Yeah, sorry, but that doesn't work in languages like German, where all proper nouns are capitalized. Let alone for people who chose to not capitalize their name - and probably also complain that their names get tagged by spellcheckers.
Re: (Score:2)
True, but spellcheckers are not universal. I'm referring to English versions of wordprocessors and such, like Word, which had a very specific configuration (on by default) to ignore capitalized words. I don't know what the German version of Word did, but it doesn't invalidate my point that things were working just find until relatively recently when some software and devices became aggressive in their spellchecks. There were even rumors that on iphones there were "forbidden" words that were extremely dif
Re: (Score:1)
What we're t
Poor little Bobby Tables (Score:4, Funny)
Yeah little Bobby Tables has been having that problem for years.
Re: (Score:2)
Re: (Score:2)
No, it isn't the "same" issue.
If I'm typing a letter to Ebrahim in is native Persian, or to Akihiko in his native Japanese, then it is quite likely that the right name will pop up, as it is a part of the language. Except that in the Japanese case there may be several "correct spellings" of the name, etc.
If I'm typing a letter to some Nikolai or Stefan in a language that isn't their native Bulgarian, for example, but English, and the names are not in common use in the said English, then it is on me to be a b
Re:Um, learn to use your phone? (Score:5, Insightful)
The snag is that spellcheckers used to ignore names, they would not attempt to "improve" them. Solution - use older software as it's more reliable and easier to use. People wonder why people aren't upgrading software instantly whenever asked, and the answer is because software updates often hurt more than they help.
Also, the problem is not "Satan" not understanding her phone. The problem is her boss always calling her Satan in emails, the office memo inviting everyotn to "Satan's going away lunch", the bank addressing their correspondence to Satan, the customer support who spends a bit of time to declare "our computer says your name is Satan, so why do you think it is wrong?" Satan can't go and fix everyone else's computer and phone.
What's needed is that software stops being stupid.
This is reminiscent of school teachers in the 50s and 60s who kept trying to correct spelling and pronunciation of the pupil's names, because they were an ignorant bunch who tried to force everyone in the beige melting pot. Or the Ellis Island officials who would write the names down incorrectly and thus make the mispelling official.
Re: (Score:2)
Re: (Score:2)
Well, ignore the first word. If it's not the first word and its capitilzed then common sense is to not try and fix it. If in doubt, don't change it. Where is the law that requires all words to be spell checked?
The phone is the worst - it does not ask before it changes words, if there are multiple choices and I don't pick one, then it will pick a choice on its own. It's like it is programmed to reject my spelling even if it doesn't know what the alternative is. Just leave in the mispelled word and it is
Re: (Score:2)
Actually, a recent smartphone is reasonably good, compared to the crap from a decade ago, if you type a quarter of a word, it gives you the few likely items you've used before in order of decreasing frequency and it you can just press and fill it in, without all the hassle of typing.
I'd prefer it to work a bit more like the Japanese or modern Chinese input, where the system changes a whole sentence, and has a much better chance to guess the words, but it isn't as bad as you make it sound.
Unless you're fight
Re: Um, learn to use your phone? (Score:2)
Also, the problem is not "Satan" not understanding her phone. The problem is her boss always calling her Satan in emails, the office memo inviting everyotn to "Satan's going away lunch", the bank addressing their correspondence to Satan, the customer support who spends a bit of time to declare "our computer says your name is Satan, so why do you think it is wrong?" Satan can't go and fix everyone else's computer and phone.
No, the issue is her boss/coworkers sending out emails/documents without proofreading
Re: (Score:2)
Good luck with that!
Next thing, you will be asking people to "think carefully!"
Re: (Score:2)
True, it is more likely that software stops being stupid long before people learn to think carefully.
Eliis Island officials didn't misspell names (Score:1)
Re: (Score:2)
The problem is that people who voluntary choose to live in Europe insist on using non-European names. It is rude towards the locals to insist having a name the locals can't pronounce nor spell. There is a reason you left India or MENA for "the West", please adapt. No, sorry, there should be no "please" in that suggestion, it should read just "adapt". Besides, this is a good illustration of how stupid these people are - why is a name YOU DIDN'T EVEN choose so important for you? Answer: it isn't. When I go to
Re: (Score:2)
Sign language also includes phonetic spelling for words that don't have their own symbol. Always has.
Duh.
Sorry about that, Santa (Score:3)
Do I still get a Christmas present?
Re: (Score:2)
No, Satan has put a burning piece of coal in your stocking. Meanwhile the cult of Santa worshippers is biting heads off of peeps.
Cabbage (Score:5, Funny)
âoeBabbage never foresaw the terrible consequences of his invention, a machine that would autocorrect his name to cabbage, every single time.ââ"Philomena Cunk
A priest, a minister and ... (Score:5, Funny)
This is what capitalization is supposed to flag. (Score:2, Insightful)
Re: (Score:1)
I think this was a recent change with apple.
Not long ago, an uppercase word would still show autocorrect suggestions but you had to tap one, unlike lowercase dictionary words that simply hitting space after will autocorrect if you don't tap the first entry in the suggestions (which is how you entered it)
Just tried it and sure enough hitting space after a capitalized word autocorrects identically to normal words in lowercase.
What BS
Re: (Score:2)
Hmm... I'm still on Monterey, and capitalization seems to stop it from auto-correcting (but I do get the red underline).
My gal Double..err, Dublin,...Okay then, Barbara (Score:2)
My gf's Nicaraguan-Syrian name gets stepped on by every automated system in the world.
Savan-Chadni has a big problem (Score:5, Funny)
See, as a content creator, he typically works on contract - meaning he has to handle billing quite frequently. And his customers get a little bothered when they see
"Mr. Johnson,
The time for your reckoning is at hand.
Satan"
Re: Savan-Chadni has a big problem (Score:2)
Perhaps Satan should learn to proofread their correspondence with customers?
Just a thought...
Re: (Score:2)
See, as a content creator, he typically works on contract - meaning he has to handle billing quite frequently. And his customers get a little bothered when they see
"Mr. Johnson,
The time for your reckoning is at hand.
Satan"
"content creator" is a fancy way of saying "unemployed". A bit like actor/waiter.
Conspiracy to offend, of course (Score:2)
>"It is important that technology becomes more inclusive,"
Give me a break. So tired of this nonsense.
*ANY* typed world could be a proper name. This has nothing to do with "inclusiveness." It is simply a fact that these applications are not magically sensing when something was meant to be a proper name and leave the word as-is. That can be difficult even for humans sometimes. Especially if the name was at the beginning of a sentence or entered as lowercase somewhere else in the sentence. Most of the
Re: Conspiracy to offend, of course (Score:2)
Is it a coincidence that those who suffer from this unintentional autocorrect in the British version of a spellchecker have names which are actually not British?
Re: (Score:2)
No, the fact that names that aren't a part of the English language do not appear in an English dictionary would be an anti-coincidence.
Re: (Score:3)
>*ANY* typed world could be a proper name"
I find it hilarious that my mistype, above, made it into my posting. Instead, I think I should be pissed at the WORLD that my "world" word was not corrected to "word" automatically for me.
Letters only please (Score:2)
Re: (Score:2)
You should stop using things invented by people with hyphenated names in protest.
It's still better than being named Alexa (Score:2)
That name is going to be largely useless for a while.
Bill Gates (Score:2)
This proves his genius. He saw it coming decades ago.
Re:Bill Gates (Score:4, Interesting)
Unlike other mailing software, that dictionary includes "Bill". Every email he types his name into generates a "would you like to add an attachment", until he either disables the feature or sets up a signature.
Unlike other mailing software, using / will try to include a file, picking something that resembles the words typed, and by default attaching the file. On the Outlook 365 web client, not even Bill Gates can disable this feature. So, if Mr. Gates ends an email with the signature
Unlike other mailing software, Outlook gets bundled into office IT packages for companies around the world, supposedly to offer a comprehensive solution for your basic business infrastructure. Businesses end up including proprietary features and locking their users into Outlook. Sure, you can tell people to set up signature blocks, but you're as likely to get 100% compliance on that as with telling people they shouldn't use tab to indent their paragraphs.
Re: (Score:2)
I was going for the Funny mod, since "bill" and "gates" are valid English words that don't fail spell check, it's unlikely the man who didn't think much of the Internet would have seen this coming, and lauding him as a genius here is generally a clue that something is up. Perhaps though I've committed a fundamental comedic error--requiring the audience to follow the same thought process, rendering the joke not funny if they fail that, or perhaps even not funny if they do since they might have to go through
Learn how to use add to personal dictionary (Score:2)
Why is this a thing? My names (and names of family and friends) are only unrecognized exactly once because I add them to my personal dictionary. Doesn't that completely address this problem?
Or is the complaint a feeling of disrespect from not seeing one's name recognized on everyone else's computer?
BTW, this is not an English/Western/Christian name issue. I have a lot of friends who name their kids with either novel names or novel spellings, and those names are often also not recognized.
Can't stand Auto-Correct. (Score:5, Insightful)
I never understood why people leave that turned on. I type what I mean, and mean what I type. I'll have a typo here and there, and certainly I don't mind spell check, but I'm just not having my device deciding that i meant something that I didn't write. I just can't abide it. Every time I get a new device, it gets turned off, immediately.
Re: (Score:2)
Same here. The only good use of auto-assumption is turned off, especially when often using more than one language as I do.
A manual spelling check option is better.
Re: (Score:2)
Because of touch keyboards on small screens.
A lot of people use swipe typing, so they literally can't avoid using auto-correct as that's fundamental to how it works.
Re: (Score:3)
Even without swipe typing auto-correct is used extensively.
You see, the keyboard on screen doesn't correspond to the touch areas of each letter. The keyboard looks at what you've typed so far, and uses that to predict the next letter you're going to type - making the hit box for those letters much larger than the hit box of letters you're less l
No, it's not.., (Score:2)
Dhruti Shah, a journalist, has backed the campaign after seeing her name autocorrected to "Dirty" and "Dorito". She said: "My first name isn't even that long -- only six characters -- but yet when it comes up as an error or it's mangled and considered an unknown entity, it's like saying that it's not just your name that's wrong, but you are."
If someone mis-spells your name, it doesn't mean the person with the misspelled name is "wrong"... it just doesn't. Why must she be looking for validation of herself from a freaking smartphone?
She can add her name to the dictionary/shortcut screen, and her friends/coworkers can do the same - there is no plot afoot to "marginalize" anyone based on their name, stop pretending there is.
I suspect... (Score:2, Interesting)
I suspect that the end result of this 'issue' will be the declaration that just like "being on time", "math", or "speaking proper English", we'll soon learn that Auto-correct is racist... /SMH
This is terminal outrage culture (Score:2)
Turn it off (Score:3)
Autocorrect messes everything up. I've had it switched off since 1997.
Instead words that are considered incorrect should be highlighted as that is the standard way to do it. And anyone who doesn’t proof read their replies etc, well it's on you.
This is a non-problem. The only way to solve it would be to tie in to national records to get all names of everyone alive as from what I see these odd names (non British/American English) are quite obviously not in the British/American English dictionaries simply because, well, they are in other dictionaries.
So one of these:
1. Have a separate names dictionary of ALL in-use names on the planet. This will be hard as these odd names can have very different spellings or sequences and don’t always translate well, plus how to you handle short names etc?
2. Just stop using autocorrect, proof read your own text. Learn to spell.
3. Or use autocorrect and effing notice you have been autocorrected (it’s not hard, it happens right in front of the user)
4. Or maybe do the smart UI design choice of highlighting incorrect words like every other bit of software on the planet that has existed since Word 97 or before, allowing the typist to notice that the system "thinks" there is an error and thus needs the typist to decide yes or no.
But instead we are probably going to get some A.I. When trying to fit a square peg into a round hole, the simple solution is to adapt the peg or hole to fit. But these days we don’t get that, instead we have some guy with a sledgehammer whacking it till it squeezes in.
Obligatory reference (Score:1)
Re: (Score:1)
There's also the joke(?) about auto-generated usernames. The first two letter from the first name, plus the first three from the last name... made impossible to change...
Harmful? (Score:3)
Rashmi Dyal-Chand, a professor at Northeastern University in the US whose name is sometimes corrected to Sashimi, is supporting the latest campaign and said: "For people with names like mine, autocorrect is not convenient and helpful. It is unhelpful. And yes -- it is harmful."
Fine, it's annoying ... perhaps "unfair" ... perhaps even costly, if it offends your customers, say.
But "harmful"? That is getting really old.
"Harmful" is just a power play. Of course if something is "harmful", you now have a moral club to enforce ... oh my, lookie there, to enforce your preferences and wishes. So that's why everything (that the cool kids don't like) has become "harmful".
Keeps some of them though (Score:2)
You see some real bangers working phone support. (Score:3)
Over 20 years ago, I took a call that looked like a prank account because the name was listed as "Shithead". It was an actual name, pronounced "SHY-theed". I took a handful of calls from guys named "Phuc". That's pronounced "Fyook".
Here we go again. (Score:2)
Another case of a very small minority wanting the entire world to change to suit them.
Let me fix that headline... (Score:2)
"Waaaa waaaa waaaa! Babies need their diapers changed!"
What a ducking problem. (Score:2)
"Add to Dictionary" - Problem solved (Score:2)
Naming children (Score:2)
Fix your name (Score:1)
Re: (Score:1)
I also see a Negative One score to the comment here.
My surprise, nowadays, refuses to exist...