Apple’s voice-to-text system has caused a stir among iPhone users. When the word “racist” is dictated, “Trump” briefly appears before it is corrected – something Apple now says it is looking into.
Tech and globalist giant Apple says it is working feverishly to fix the suspicious bug in its dictation feature. The bug, which first came to light on Tuesday, results in the iPhone temporarily displaying the word “Trump” when users utter “racist” via voice input, reports American CNN, among others.
Watch the video above to see how an iPhone behaves when the TNT journalist speaks the word “Trump”.
Several iPhone owners have reported and confirmed the strange event on social media. Videos demonstrating the bug have quickly spread, raising questions about the reliability of the technology and possible political implications.
Apple admits the bug
Apple has confirmed the problem in a statement, claiming that it is all due to an incorrect interpretation in the speech recognition model.
– We are aware of an issue with the speech recognition model that powers Dictation and we are rolling out a fix today, said a company spokesperson.
According to Apple, the bug is caused by the system incorrectly suggesting words with phonetic overlap. The company claims that the Dictation feature sometimes shows an incorrect word before quickly correcting it to the user’s intended word
It actually does it i tried.
What the heck @Apple @tim_cook ?@POTUS @realDonaldTrump should sue you to oblivion!!Fire the developer and team who thought this will be funny pic.twitter.com/4rdHtVUgRS
— Randy Lerma (@randy_lerma) February 25, 2025
Coincidentally, the bug came to light the day after Apple announced a massive $500 billion investment in US facilities and infrastructure. Donald Trump has stated that he sees the investment as a result of his tariff policy.
The company remains positive about “Woke”
Meanwhile, Apple shareholders voted down a proposal to end the company’s so-called DEI (“diversity, equity and inclusion”) initiative which is often linked to left-wing radicalism.
The incident marks another problem for Apple since the launch of their new AI system Apple Intelligence. The company was recently forced to disable a feature that summarized news headlines due to inaccuracies.
John Burkey, founder of AI startup Wonderrush.ai and former member of Apple’s Siri team, expresses skepticism about the company’s explanation.
– This feels like a significant prank. The pressing question is whether this was introduced into the data or embedded in the code.
Other experts question Apple’s explanation about phonetic similarity between words. Peter Bell, a professor of speech technology at the University of Edinburgh, says it’s more likely that the underlying software was modified by one or more Apple employees.