When Purchase Recommendations Go Bad 370
nixman99 writes "An article on MSNBC describes what happens when 'View Similar Products' recommendations go bad. From the article: 'The company said it was alerted to the problem early yesterday afternoon after word began spreading among bloggers. When visitors to Walmart.com requested Planet of the Apes: The Complete TV Series on DVD, four other movies were recommended under the heading Similar Items. Those films included Martin Luther King: I Have A Dream/Assassination of MLK and Unforgivable Blackness: The Rise and Fall of Jack Johnson.'"
That's quite funny (Score:5, Funny)
Re:That's quite funny (Score:5, Funny)
Re:That's quite funny (Score:4, Informative)
Strange recommendations (Score:5, Funny)
http://img241.imageshack.us/img241/8897/sa6iz.png [imageshack.us]
The Eye Of The Beholder (Score:5, Interesting)
Planet Of The Apes - Social Commentary.
Martin Luther King - Import changer of society.
Were you to be a glass is half full kind of person, that sounds like a connection. I could entirely accept that enough customers to trigger a connection algorithm are interested in social commentary to the degree that both titles appeal.
Were you to be a glass is half empty kind of person, clearly the system is racist.
Fortunately, we have a media that's only interested in postive and uplifting stories so they'd never focus purely on the negative, for shock value, without considering other possible alternatives.
And, for added amusement, type "Civ 4" in to Amazon and see what recommendations come up further down the list. It may too be racist. It may be a deeply humorous commentary on lonely guys playing Civ 4. Or it may be some other connection that we haven't figured out yet.
But then that's the whole point of data mining... Finding connections that humans tend to be entirely too preoccupied by their assumptions to be able to see beyond.
Re:The Eye Of The Beholder (Score:5, Funny)
Or to put it another way, if the banana is half eaten.
Well the Civ 4 example is insulting (Score:5, Insightful)
Star Trek (the episodes that are not pure action or particle of the week thrillers) does this a couple of times. I am reminded of the color difference episode where we meet two races locked in a fight to the death, the one being black/white and the other being white/black.
TNG had an episode to show how stupid judging people on their sexual preferences is but showing a race that is purely homosexual (a 1 gender species that still used two people to procreate is off course the ultimate same sex race) with the sexual weirdos being those who tended to have heterosexual feelings.
This is indeed the eye of the beholder, it took me a while to figure it out even what the problem was. Apparently blacks are apes.
Re:Well the Civ 4 example is insulting (Score:3, Interesting)
I had the same problem working out what people's beef was with King Kong - apparently enslaving a huge gorilla when it's the only such example of a huge gorilla is somehow related to enslaving African people. Maybe I'm naïve but I didn't see that connection.
Re:Well the Civ 4 example is insulting (Score:5, Insightful)
Sometimes this can be very blatant - Howard Cosell saying "Would you look at that monkey run?" when describing a black football player. Sometimes this can be less blatant, and a "clever racist" (if there is such a thing) will try to say "Well, Planet of the Apes is social commentary and so is MLK, so it's just those darkies being overly uppity again!) And, yes, sometimes it can be absurd - I have some friends who attend a church that insists they boycott King Kong because it is, and I quote, "An interracial love story designed to show the black man's unquenchable and self-destructive desire for white women."
So, I'd say it's somewhat disingenuous to say "Gosh, I don't know why people would get so upset that someone is comparing Monkeys Gone Wild with Martin Luther King! It's so absurd!" It comes off as rather false.
For further reading, I recommend "How to Rent a Negro" - pretty funny take on a less than funny subject.
Re:Well the Civ 4 example is insulting (Score:5, Insightful)
This reminds me of the South Park episode about the flag, with the black figure hung and a bunch of white figures around the black figure. The boys don't see anything wrong with it because they don't see white people hanging a black guy, they see 4 guys hanging another guy. Chef sees it as blatant racism. Racism is in the eye of the beholder.
I took King Kong to be a movie about capturing a giant ape. If you see racism in the pairing of Planet of the Apes and MLK, or in King Kong, perhaps you should take a look in the mirror, because the real racist may be closer than you think.
Re:Well the Civ 4 example is insulting (Score:5, Insightful)
Real racism is not in the eye of the beholder. Real racism is when you irrationally use the characteristics you believe are true of a "race" to judge a member of that race. It becomes especially destructive when the characteristics believed true are false and derogatory, and especially destructive when it involves judging the value of a person (something not intrinsically wrong in certain contexts... "would I hire this person?" "is that person going to try to kill me?" we make value judgements every day).
This is as close to an emprically verifiable term as you can ever get when dealing with humans, assuming you can get at the inner state of the person.
The second type of racism is in the eye of the beholder, and it has gotten to the point where "That's racist!" is one step shy of "I don't like that!", only much, much meaner. The distinguishing characteristic of this kind of "racism" is that if the accuser can come up with any reason that the accusee might be doing or saying something for a racist reason, regardless of how likely or even how true that reason is, the accusee can be presumed racist, and should therefore be vilified. Fortunately, I think we're very near the point where that accusation will have been so overused that it will be diluted into nearly no effect.
As a homework exercise, estimate the probability that this form of racism will ever be "eliminated", and consider the consequences of your answer.
Often, it's hard to tell which is which. I prefer to cultivate an attitude more like the South Park children than the current attitudes of people who are hypersensitive about the second type of racism. This is the first I've heard that "of course" King Kong is a stand-in for black people. Personally, I thought he was just a giant monster. Since this accusation is a "projection" type accusation, I am inclined to think this is the second kind of "racism."
(Incidentally, the second type of "racism" is not itself really racist. It's just evil, in every sense of the term, especially including how it destroys the one afflicted with it. No apology for that belief.)
Re:Well the Civ 4 example is insulting (Score:3)
Re:Well the Civ 4 example is insulting (Score:3, Insightful)
Re:Well the Civ 4 example is insulting (Score:3, Insightful)
Re:Well the Civ 4 example is insulting (Score:3, Insightful)
Re:Well the Civ 4 example is insulting (Score:3, Informative)
Is this racist, http://www.theharrowgroup.com/articles/20020318/A
Re:Well the Civ 4 example is insulting (Score:3, Informative)
This is what happens when you rely on just a quote. You mistake the man who 'went to the mats' for Cassius Clay and multiple other 'athletes of color' (or whatever the current PC term is) for a racist. Which couldn't be further from the truth - as Cosell worked his whole career to see black atheletes treated as just that athletes.
Re:Well the Civ 4 example is insulting (Score:3, Interesting)
Lincoln HATED blacks. The Emancipation Proclamation even kept states within the Union as slave states! The Wiki for the EP covers much of this.
Lincoln forced the South the secede as he planned on taxing and setting tariffs on the South in order to pay off his cronies for "improvements" in the North. The South thr
Re:Well the Civ 4 example is insulting (Score:2)
Never saw the ep, but it sounds like a bit of a rip off of Ursula Le Guin's Left Hand of Darkness.
The Eye of the Beholder (Score:2)
Ah. I didn't get that either.
In Denmark we have a law against racism, which quite frequently has some unpleasent side effects, as exemplified in recent local elections. Someone might accuse islam of being a supremacist religion. Then his opponents, instead of looking at the sources and coming up with counterarguments, simply report him to the police for racism. That creates a
Re:The Eye Of The Beholder (Score:2)
Re:The Eye Of The Beholder (Score:5, Informative)
Planet Of The Apes - Social Commentary.
Martin Luther King - Import changer of society.
That would explain the recommendation if it were to come up on Amazon.com, but Walmart.com used a less intelligent linking system. From AFA [msn.com] (another f'ing article), Wal-Mart manually assigns DVDs to categories, and then will pass on the recommendation if you're browsing from the same category. So it has nothing to do with user habits.
Re:The Eye Of The Beholder (Score:5, Informative)
Re:The Eye Of The Beholder (Score:4, Funny)
You must not be very fluent in French. The word queue does indeed mean tail, but it also has another much more interesting meaning ;-)
Re:The Eye Of The Beholder (Score:3)
Which even from the perspective of a racist seemingly makes no sense, since many [allposters.com] apes [nworbcire.com] have white skin, and they all seem to have straight hair, oftentimes brown. Ridiculous as it is in either case, it makes just as much sense for black folks to call white folks monkeys or apes, so I'm not sure how this particular idiocy got started. I guess it just demostrates a little more ignorance and stupidity on the part of those making such comparisons.
Cheers
Re:The Eye Of The Racist (Score:3, Insightful)
They're black or brown. They've got that flat nose thing going. They wear little or no clothing. They come from Africa, living side by side with each other. They're clearly related to us, but also clearly more primitive.
On a continent with many different primate species, it would make sense if they were all related, and the fact that one of them can interbreed with us doesn't mean they're the same, any more than it means that horses and donkeys
Re:The Eye Of The Beholder (Score:2)
Fortunately, we have a media that's only interested in postive and uplifting stories so they'd never focus purely on the negative, for shock value, without considering other possible alternatives.
And naturally, they wouldn't wait until later in the article to reveal that the same recommendations were also linked with "Everybody Loves Raymond", "Friends", and "The Powerpuff Girls" just to make it seem as incriminating as possable.
Re:The Eye Of The Beholder (Score:3, Interesting)
The remake was a very low-brow action movie with no discernable deeper meaning like the original.
The original is a natural pairing with other civil rights pieces of the time, but if someone is thin
Re:The Eye Of The Beholder (Score:2, Informative)
Although TFA article pointed out that *later in the day* "Planet of the Apes" linked to other innoucuous titles such as "Everybody Loves Raymond," I suspect this was just PR damage control.
Re:The Eye Of The Beholder (Score:2)
Indeed. Let's unleash the Godly wrath of the evangelical right upon WalMart for spreading such material. That'll give people in rural Red State areas something to do with their free time and put WalMart in a world of hurt.
Seems like a good recommendation (Score:5, Insightful)
POTA is a movie about civil rights, in this case across species, not races. One species (the monkeys/gorillas) effectively enslaves another species (humans) and the base message of the movie is about the struggle for emancipation by this enslaved species.
So exactly how is a movie about enslavement and emancipation not related to real life civil rights issues?
I'm not American so I'm not really exposed to this over-the-top sensitive PC stuff, but this seems just silly to me. Franky, I find the people who did the complaining about this issue offensive and ignorant.
Re:Seems like a good recommendation (Score:3, Informative)
It's because people are way to fucking sensitive, and the corporations know it.
It's similar to the whole sexual harassment thing. All it takes these days is a hint of it, to get someone fired. No matter if it's intended or not, just the suggestion that it might be inappropriate, and wham!
Sometimes, I think people look for the worse possible thing they can find, just so they have something to complain about.
H.
Re:Seems like a good recommendation (Score:3, Insightful)
--Oh but she did wink at me!
--Whatever, she was just being nice/--Whatever she was just being funny
But if it is the other way around, the male will be out of the door immediatly, before anoyone can say "lawsuit".
--Oh but he winked at me!
--WHAT???! He's GONE!
I am not saying that sexual harassment or racial bias should take place, but in efforts to stop it
Re:Seems like a good recommendation (Score:2)
Re:Seems like a good recommendation (Score:2)
Notice the second sentence states "flirting." So replace "wink at me" with a bit more overt form of flirting, say "place a pubic hair on my can of Coke." Also, the penalty may have been a bit extreme, so replace "out the door [sic] immediatly" with "immediately enrolled in an sensitivity ropes course written by Oprah Winfrey and preside over by Lisa Lampanelli." (I do maintain that as hard as it can be to get fired by
The problem is... (Score:2, Interesting)
I can see how it might be a good recommendation... (Score:2)
Re:I can see how it might be a good recommendation (Score:2)
Re:I can see how it might be a good recommendation (Score:2)
Re:I can see how it might be a good recommendation (Score:2)
Re:I can see how it might be a good recommendation (Score:3, Funny)
why are you ashamed? (Score:2)
Re:I can see how it might be a good recommendation (Score:2)
The Mayor is corrupt and inept.
Miss Bellum is a vamp, using her sexual power to control the mayor.
The main villain is a power crazy Monkey (with an Asiatic accent), who, rejected in favour of pretty girls, turns his fallo-centric oedipal black rage against Townsville.
Re:Seems like a good recommendation (Score:3, Insightful)
And it certainly does not just occur in the United States. I remember a couple of years ago Conan O'Brian did a show in Canada and did a segment making fun of French Canadians which he got run out of the country for. And then there are plenty of e
Re:Seems like a good recommendation (Score:3, Insightful)
The computer doesnt "know". It bases recommendations on things such as what other buyers bought or looked at, or perhaps it even looks into the description of the movie and looks for connections with other film descriptions.
In this case, the program probably connected som
Re:Seems like a good recommendation (Score:2, Informative)
It actually makes good sense (Score:5, Insightful)
So yes, it was appropriate. Those who are offended never looked deeper than the skin. Which is sort of the problem.
Re:It actually makes good sense (Score:2)
Re:It actually makes good sense (Score:2)
So they are comparing Martin Luther King to the people fighting for civil rights , just so happen that now it is all humanity that are the repressed minority.
The apes see us as all the same , a lesser being , Kind of like the predominant view that ethnic minorities were lesser beings
Re:It actually makes good sense (Score:2)
in a positive light (Score:3, Insightful)
The Planet of the Apes is a social commentary in the form of a sci-fi film, MLK was a historic figure who made great efforts to make society more equal.
Trying to view a glass that's half full I'll try to see that as a connection that some software somewhere made. Of course the victocrats(glass half empty types) will see nothing beyond the titles of the connected products. To them I say get over it and try to look beyond the superficial.
The same thing happened to me. (Score:2, Insightful)
8 Mile
Over the Top
Bean
Blame (Score:5, Insightful)
Re:Blame (Score:2)
The recommendation, regardless of who or what made it, doesn't seem racist or bigoted to me...
what exactly is so offensive? (Score:5, Insightful)
Re:what exactly is so offensive? (Score:2)
Why troll?
Re:what exactly is so offensive? (Score:4, Insightful)
First, the second biggest examples of racism in Europe are the Neo Nazi movement, and of course the highly nationalistic political parties (BNP in the UK for example).
The football league is just a marketing ploy to give the masses something to be tribal about while making shed loads of money.
And, like it or not, human nature is tribal in nature (which is why you have cliques of friends you like, and masses of people who don't interest you).
The first biggest example of racism in Europe? The Anti-Racism laws, and the new Inquisition that comprises the various Anti Racism committees.
Re:what exactly is so offensive? (Score:2)
I mean a sport which encourages large crowds to drink, sing and have insane loyality? It's a low brow version of religion with very violent people involved..
Re:what exactly is so offensive? (Score:3, Funny)
Re:what exactly is so offensive? (Score:2)
Re:what exactly is so offensive? (Score:2, Informative)
For your information, since your school failed to teach you history, slavery was used in europe long long before anyone discovered your small island.
Slave trade was arguably the most important part of the entire reason the wikings undertook so far journeys. However, the wikings used primarily used people from eastern europe as slaves.
All other cultures in europe also used slavery, primarily from neighbouring countries.
The only thing unique with american slavery was its size in numbe
Re:what exactly is so offensive? (Score:2, Informative)
Actually, the Dutch, and last time I checked we were still Europeans, spent a lot of time transporting slaves from Africa to the Americas. Even back then the dirty work got outsourced...
Bzzt! (Score:2)
Knowledge of history is important. The world is not a memoryless system. How can you understand the present state of the system if you do not understand the past?
hierarchies (Score:4, Insightful)
anyway if you categorized these things in terms of hierarchies or in terms of degrees of separation, and they wanted to boost the relevance of MLK stuff, they'd boost the levels of search depth to find connections, even tenuous connections, to make things that had even a remote connection to one of MLK's supercategories recommend the MLK media.
technology can make people look pretty damn stupid, but as a progressive, I'm pretty embarrassed by the progressives that were so sure they saw overt evidence of deliberate and corporate-sponsored racism in this. I'm not saying there wasn't a racist in wal-mart that thought it would be funny to manually link POTA to MLK, but it's not even close to the only possible explanation. All people have to do is remember the old grapevine game to realize how easily an intent or an idea can corrupt itself by just being passed three or four links down a chain.
Re:hierarchies (Score:3, Funny)
(although I don't exactly see how anyone thought it would be a good idea to have it be suggested by using apes).
Because if they had chosen mice, the movie would have been a comedy.
Yahoo teh racists, oh noes! (Score:4, Interesting)
http://images.search.yahoo.com/search/images?p=ki
Are bad recommendations from trolls bad? (Score:5, Funny)
E.g. http://www.speakeasy.org/~curby/swg/text/jellypon
I vote for funny.
Damn... (Score:2, Interesting)
But why? (Score:3, Interesting)
Is it a simple un-supervised algorithm that creates relationships based on customer's choices? Then shouldn't the whole American public be to blame? In other words did the people who buy "Planet Of The Apes" also buy the book about MLK, implying an association between black people and apes? The fact of the matter remains that most people in U.S. are racist - period. Even the ones who preach PC are racist even if just at the subconscious level. There have been studies done that shows this.
This makes me think of an interesting point: in one of the previous articles on Slashdot someone said how it is possible to extract so much data out of people's wish lists. But how about also gaining an insight into the American global subconscious by looking at the items people choose when they shop at the stores like WalMart, Amazon and others? I see someone in Sociology being interested in this...
Algorithms (Score:2)
I'm curious, since I've found that similar algorithms sometimes can be easily manipulated, often for entertaining results
For example, Amazon has a "customers who viewed this item also viewed" feature, that I've found was fairly easy to manipulate in the past, simply by doing things such as spending 5 minutes looking at pages for various Sesame Street toys, and then spending 5 minutes looking at pages for various risque titles over in bo
EXCEPT . . . (Score:3, Interesting)
This would only cross section those consumers who shopped online at those various stores. Even assuming one third of americans purchased ten percent of all household purchases on websites, you would have an indicative three percent of all purchases to make up for one hundred percent of all american characteristics? Does it really make sense that people anywhere, US, worldwide or in any particular
Re:But why? (Score:2)
That implication is unjustified -- people could have associated the society in POTA with the one MLK was fighting against, or it could have been as innocuous as "I remember listening to King speak when I was a kid in the '60s; let's watch that. What else was I into back then; oh yeah, that Planet of the Apes movie. Sixties culture sure was great!"
What's the problem? (Score:2, Insightful)
You always get a slightly strange recommendation when shopping on sites with this feature. It is to be expected, categorisation can only go so far...
Humans are biased pattern-making machines. (Score:2)
I had the same feeling as I read about this. The system only observes and responds according to its observations, without any judgement. People, however, are full of biases and inclinations, and are quick to see racial slurs (at best) and conspiracies (at worst) where none really exist.
In that way, I have to say I find Wal-Mart's apology to be a greater racial
Essential .NET purchase recommendation (Score:5, Funny)
Re:Essential .NET purchase recommendation (Score:2)
Exception Filtering (Score:2, Interesting)
Examples:
a)Filtering out Metallica named files off of Napster.
b)Filtering out Chinese bloggers off of MSN.
c)Filtering out Planet of the Apes from similar themed Walmart DVDs.
Questions:
1)Is it even possibl
Someone should notify Kanye West immediately... (Score:2, Funny)
Amazon... (Score:5, Funny)
So what did they recommend to me?
This [amazon.com]. Yeah - great thanks.
Hanlon's Razor? Interesting... (Score:5, Interesting)
"Never attribute to malice that which can be adequately explained by stupidity"
In this case, it could be construed that either the system, or the people making the malicious links are the stupid element - both could come to the racial conclusion by misinterpreting the data. Alternatively, the system might be too smart, working in a logical way such that elements in subject matter for both Planet of the Apes and Martin Luther King both deal with social commentary, alienation and segregation.
Either way, the comments by the spokesperson that the system was malfunctioning and not working as it was supposed to are probably incorrect; it work exactly as it was programmed, but it was either too stupid or too smart for us to comprehend adequately.
Re:Hanlon's Razor? Interesting... (Score:2)
Problem is, maliciousness is often a direct result of stupidity.
-FL
Re:Hanlon's Razor? Interesting... (Score:2)
sometimes in the form, it's easy to understand the concept of infinity,...
Oh you guys HAVE to be kidding (Score:3, Insightful)
I'm not saying it was maliciously done. Without seeing the algorithm, nobody can know for sure, but I know enough about data mining to know that random stuff crops up. But for the Love of CHRIST show a little empathy.
I bet people would be singing a different tune if it were four documentaries about 9/11 mixed with Mahmoud Darwish's The Shahid?
Re:Oh you guys HAVE to be kidding (Score:2)
In this example, people are drawing the conclusion that the recommendations infer that MLK is an ape.
In your example, there is no "surface" conclusion that can be drawn. Mahmoud Darwish's "The Shahid" (aka: martre, or suicide bomber) would be considered offensive if recommended with ANY "item" in this country, in much the same way most people would consider a recommendation to read Marx's Communist Manefesto to be offe
Re:Oh you guys HAVE to be kidding (Score:2)
How are we going to get past racial issues if we make a big stink out of every minor thing that happens. If people are actually offended by this recommendation and feel that this is calling black people apes, then they are a serious part of the problem.
Re:Oh you guys HAVE to be kidding (Score:2)
I bet that in most of the world, equating black people with monkeys is either unknown as an expression of racism, or something people stopped doing in the 1940s or so.
If someone did the monkey/black-guy thing in my presence here in .se,
I'd probably first not understand him, and then, horrified, assume that he
came from a family of crypto-Na
Re:Oh you guys HAVE to be kidding (Score:2)
Re:Oh you guys HAVE to be kidding (Score:2)
Is racial insensitivity so DEAD in your country that you can't see how putting four influential black icons onto the same page as a B-movie about monkeys is offensive?
No, it's alive. Unfortunately it takes the form of screamy women (this is not intended as a stereotype of all women, just certain individuals I've been unfortunate enough to meet) who think that saying blackboard or whiteboard is offensive and nurseries where children learn baa baa yellow sheep. You can probably guess what most people think
Re:Oh you guys HAVE to be kidding (Score:3, Insightful)
According to Amazon, people who bought George Orwell's Animal farm, which is about farm animals, also bought the Schindler's List DVD, which is about Jews. Is that insensitive to Jews, in y
Re:Oh you guys HAVE to be kidding (Score:3, Insightful)
Evil Walmart (Score:5, Insightful)
Why? (Score:5, Insightful)
The press is always ready for a scandel and never ready to actually follow it up with some investigative journalism. I guess its cheaper to just re-broadcast a video feed and pay the royalties or print something direct from AP.
Re:Why? (Score:4, Insightful)
This type of system develops strange biases in several ways, most noteably through human interpretation. Say you have a keyword "black/white relations." One data entry person might only assign that keyword to nonfictional documentaries, while another might assign that keyword to based-on-real-life movies as well. And another person who's particularly sensitive to the underlying messages of movies might assign that keyword to Planet of the Apes (as well as possibly to box collections of ST:TOS).
Somebody selects one of those movies, and gets a bizarre selection of "related" movies which simply reflects the fact that three different people viewed the use of a defined keyword and thus assigned it in three different ways. It's hard to even design business rules to prevent this from happening because it overly limits what the system was designed to do. If a business rule says that only nonfiction documentaries and based-on-real-life movies can receive the "black/white relations" tag, you might end up missing a movie like Crash. If the business rule says instead that you can't assign a tag based on the "underlying" message of a movie, how do you define underlying message? Racism or "black/white relations" (my bet is that the Wal-mart keyword was closer to "black/white relations" rather than "racism" because all the movies that apparently popped up as suggestions were about that particular subset of racism) is the in-your-face message of Planet of the Apes. It's so thinly masked by the story that I'm not sure I'd define it was the "underlying" message. I'm the type of person that probably *would* assign Planet to the "black/white relations" tag, because its consideration of that theme is about the only redeeming factor of the movie.
Of course, I grew in an area where--due to integration--racism was a pretty major issue and I thought I'd learned most of the various "bad" terms that members of one race (hell, one European background) called members of another race (or other European backgrounds) when I was young. "Monkey" had definitely fallen out of use in my area by the 1980s; first time I was ever introduced to it as a racist term was online about four years ago.
Well, I'll say it -- I'm offended! (Score:5, Insightful)
Forgive me for lecturing, but I'll stereotype a bit here and suggest that the majority of /. readers don't fall into the group of people who can see offense in this situation either out of ignorance, or unfamiliarity with minorities and their history. I know there's a large contingent out there that believes the white male is an "oppressed" group in America due to affirmative action, Title IX, or other assorted anti-harassment and anti-discrimination laws or rules. I'm sure the strain must be unbearable...
I love this site and my fellow slashdotters and I come here every day -- but sometimes things are just wrong.
I Am Not A Conspiracy Theorist (IANACT?) but there could be something more sinister at work here than some computer algorithm linking the social commentary of "The Planet of the Apes" with Martin Luther King's role in the civil rights struggle. Discrimination and offensive racial stereotyping are not dead issues -- they often lie just beneath the surface because there are many who still believe that some people are inferior to others simply because of their ethnicity, skin color or gender. And speaking as an African American (and I don't get up on this soapbox often, folks), this was offensive and I am not amused.
We all know the posters on this site wouldn't let Microsoft off the hook so easily or rush to defend them so quickly if the folks in Redmond were behind this.
Now, let the bashing begin! Who needs positive karma?
Let me be the first to say... (Score:5, Funny)
Re:Let me be the first to say... (Score:5, Funny)
Re:Highly suprising (Score:2)
Racial stereotyping happens all the time , even here , a place where the geek culture is predominant , one of the most accepting sub-cultures(at least in my and several other peoples personal experiences).
Now these product recommendations do have a rather ominous ring to them , but I believe this is not racism
It could show that people who like sci-fi are also into civil rights etc.
Some people over-react and
Re:Highly suprising (Score:2, Insightful)
the phrase "afican-american" implies that all black people in america are immigrants from africa, and while most of their ancestors were from africa that doesn't mean they need to be labeled "african-americans" anymore than white people need to be labeled "european-american
Re:Highly suprising (Score:3, Interesting)
My uncle is African-American, as are some of my good friends. They were born in Etheopia, Tchad, Algeria, South Africa, Egypt, Nigeria, Tanzania, Kenya, and a host of other places IN AFRICA. I have other friends from Haiti, the Dominican Republic, and Jamaica. And do you know what? Not a single one of them refers to him or hersel
Re:Highly suprising (Score:3, Informative)
The term "African American" has been in common usage in the United States since the late 1980s, when greater numbers of African Americans began to adopt the term self-referentially. Malcolm X favored the term "African American" over "Negro" and used the term at an OAAU (Organization of Afro American Unity) meeting in the early 1960s, saying, "Twenty-two million African-Americans - that's what we are - Africans who are in America." Former NBA player/coach Lenny Wilkens is another who used th