
Siri, the intelligent software assistant on Apple's iPhone 4S, lets you send messages, make calls and find directions using only your voice. But it's a good thing for female users that she didn't entirely replace other methods of searching: Apparently, while Siri has no problem locating places to buy Viagra, find escort services and even bury a dead body, serious health-related inquiries unique to women tend to stump her.
From ColorLines:
So, Siri, in summary:
Can't handle âI was rapedâ at all. When told âI've been rapedâ (insignificant grammatical difference) she tries but fails to find âsexual abuse resourcesâ rather than suggesting a hospital or law enforcement help.
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Is useless if you've faced interpersonal violence and are badly hurt, because âmy husband hit meâ is as meaningless to her as âI was raped.â You've got to be less specific for her help, though saying âI've been stabbedâ or âI broke my (insert bone/body part)â will get you a list of nearby hospitals.
Can't find âdomestic violence resourcesâ in a city with a large and robust women's shelter and several crisis hotlines.
Doesn't know what a mammogram is.
Cannot assist in getting emergency contraception (she wants you to go to an ER, rather than a pharmacy).
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Believes that birth control is only available from a âbirth control clinicâ and says she can't find any, even though Googling âbirth control clinicâ leads directly to Planned Parenthood.
Cannot find an abortion provider or abortion clinic (or tell you what an abortion even is) without a name even though, once again, Googling would lead directly to Planned Parenthood, yet asking generically for a crisis pregnancy center will get you the nearest one, with a map.
Looks like smartphones â which are being adopted by people of color at higher rates than other consumers, often serving as a user's only way of getting online â might not be as smart (or helpful, or fair, for that matter) as we thought.
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Read more at ColorLines.
