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Saying that something is or isn't offensive doesn't require being and expert in cultural studies. You just know it by the virtue of being part of the culture and observing what the trends of the majority are.

I think your militant stance on the subject is more problematic than someone else's view that the word motherboard is not offensive.

Also, advocating for some narrow unknown group of people to have exclusive right to define language gives off a little cultish vibes.



"part of the culture".

See, this is the whole issue right here. It's not about a single culture. It's hundreds. This wordlist is for global products with literally billions of users in literally hundreds of countries.

Yes, it requires experts to know what will be inoffensive to all of them at once (or at least, the vast majority).

Your "narrow unknown group of people" is really "people who are experts at language and culture and understand this".

Paying and asking them to help figure out how to create common standards that will cover the majority of the hundreds of cultures at once does not seem cultish or militant at all to me?

It is something literally every single company with literally billions of global users in hundreds of cultures does.

Otherwise they end up naming their product something offensive to a culture, etc.

News stories about those gaffes occur literally all the time, so i'm sort of shocked you are really trying to argue that trying to avoid them is somehow cultish.

I am probably one of the least "politically correct" people you will find, and i'm not even all that progressive in the scheme of things, yet this clearly makes sense to me. So I look at this, and see HN having a huge overreaction because they are upset the world is becoming a lot more politically correct for no obvious benefit.

That bothers me too - a lot in fact. I just don't see the particular thing complained about in this part of the thread (a wordlist used to ensure google doesn't say offensive things in product documentation) all that objectionable.

The original article, about offensive/inclusive/etc AI writing nudges, bothers me about 1000x more than the wordlist.


This is about censoring the word mother clearly. It is nonsense.


Again, you literally know nothing about how or why the decision is made, but are 100% sure about what happened and why. Yet they are the problem and not you?

I would urge you to actually seek facts first, rather than make them up yourself just because you are sure you are right. It's not a particularly helpful approach.




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