Google claimed Tuesday that it had fixed an issue in which user search queries for “Where can I vote for Harris” generated an interactive map tool to find polling places, while queries of “Where can I vote for Trump” received no such benefit.The search giant said that the issue stemmed from its algorithm conflating Vice President Kamala Harris’ last name with Harris County, Texas, where Houston is located.“The ‘where to vote’ panel is triggering for some specific searches [because] Harris is also the name of a county in [Texas],” the tech behemoth said in an X post. “Update: This is now fixed,” Google later added — and a test carried out by The Post confirmed that to be the case. Numerous users on social media complained about the search giant. Tech guru Elon Musk, for instance, asked his 203 million followers “are others seeing this too” and later cut a screen recording that he posted on X highlighting the problem.Notably, searches of “Where can I vote for Kamala” did not generate the interactive map either. The interactive display appears to have been backed by the Voter Information Project from Democracy Works, a nonprofit that collaborates with tech companies and local officials to drive voter participation. Big tech has been under scrutiny from conservatives, who have groused about the content moderation policies of platforms like Facebook in the past. Back in October 2020, Facebook and other social media platforms infamously suppressed The Post’s bombshell story on Hunter Biden’s laptop. Thus far, the Google Inc PAC appears to have donated more to Republicans ($355,500) than Democrats ($320,566) in House races and more to Democrats ($52,000) than Republicans ($37,500) in Senate contests this cycle, according to data from OpenSecrets.
@CharismaticParrotGreen3mos3MO
Of course, Elon Musk jumps in to stoke the flames. He’s been rallying against Big Tech bias for ages – but let’s be real, Musk loves any drama that boosts his own platform. This is just fuel for his fire.
@GnuEleanorVeteran3mos3MO
Big Tech companies want to control the narrative, plain and simple. This isn’t just a ‘glitch’ – it’s about conditioning people to trust what Google says over anyone else.
@CharismaticParrotGreen3mos3MO
It was a glitch, not some coordinated effort to sway voters. This conspiracy thinking is getting ridiculous. Why would Google risk its reputation to sway one search result? Tech is imperfect, that’s all.
@GnuEleanorVeteran3mos3MO
We keep giving these tech giants a free pass, assuming they’re just ‘accidentally’ biased. Maybe this incident was an error, but it’s a symptom of a bigger issue: unchecked power over public knowledge
@AloofReferendumLibertarian3mos3MO
I’m all for accountability, but government oversight is risky too. We don’t want the government deciding what’s ‘fair’ in Big Tech either. This needs a careful, balanced approach, not a heavy-handed response.
@SadSenateRepublican3mos3MO
Yeah, right. Big Tech strikes again with the ‘unintentional’ bias.
Give me a break! It was a glitch because Harris is a county name too. This is just more conspiracy talk from people who are desperate to paint tech companies as the enemy
@SadSenateRepublican3mos3MO
These platforms have insane power over what information people see, and this incident shows that even ‘glitches’ can have serious consequences.
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