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    The Week

    Microsoft's 'avoid ghetto' app: 'Racist'?

    A new technology designed to help pedestrians avoid bad neighborhoods has plenty of smartphone users up in arms

    A new Microsoft technology that may help users avoid "unsafe neighborhoods" is generating controversy and eliciting claims of "racist undertones." Here, a brief guide to what's been dubbed the "avoid ghetto" app:

    What exactly is this app?
    Last week, Microsoft was awarded a patent for a feature on GPS devices. The feature, which will reportedly be part of future Windows phones, takes into account weather and crime statistics when suggesting routes for pedestrians. According to the patent filing, the technology will help a user avoid passing through an "unsafe neighborhood or being in an open area that is subject to harsh temperatures."

    SEE MORE: Can the Windows 8 app store take on Apple?

     

    It's not really called the "avoid ghetto" app, right?
    No. That's simply what many commentators have dubbed it. And "the 'avoid ghetto' tag is a bit of a misnomer," says David Murphy at PC Mag. "Microsoft seems to want its users to be able to avoid any and all transit headaches."

    And people are poking fun at it?
    Some are. This app, says Supermercado at WorkItLA, is "perfect for all your racist friends." And "what if someone using a route from this system does get mugged, shot, assaulted, or robbed?" wonders Chris Matyszczyk at CNET. "Would they feel entitled to sue Microsoft because the route was supposed to be 'ghetto-free'?" Well, before we laugh this off too much, says Anna North at Jezebel, we should acknowledge that this app could actually help women avoid rape. If Microsoft includes "rape states in their route recommendations, they may be arming ladies with some extra information."

    SEE MORE: Can Microsoft revolutionize TV before Apple?

     

    How else might this technology be used?
    Buried within the patent is another use for this technology, one many are finding more troubling than the "avoid ghetto" feature. Advertisers could potentially use the technology to navigate users past a particular billboard or ad campaign on their route. "Yikes!" says Chenda Ngak at CBS News. "Not only might we take the long way home, we may also be forced to pass by billboards at Microsoft's will."

    Sources: CBS News, CNET, Jezebel, PC Mag, WorkItLA

    SEE MORE: Steve Ballmer's final CES keynote: A total 'flop'?

     

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    99 comments

    • Windriver  •  1 mth 16 days ago
      The new GPS will not give directions to Chicago, Detroit, Baltimore or St Louis either.
    • A Yahoo! User  •  1 mth 16 days ago
      If it were based on race it would be racist. It is based on crime data. If high crime areas happen to be associated with a particular race get over it.
    • kahuna-uno  •  Houston, Texas  •  1 mth 16 days ago
      Wow, I live in the 'greenspoint area' of Houston, as I tried to unload the ap, my phone screen turned red and the words "too late muthaf*@#%er" began flashing. This thing REALLY does work, I just wish that I had known about it years ago before the move :)
    • Michael  •  1 mth 16 days ago
      If you think this is racist come take a walk through the hood on Detroit's east side wearing your new Air Jordans, see how long you last.
    • Topkick  •  1 mth 16 days ago
      I don't see a problem being redirected around road construction, traffic jams, etc. And many urban areas are unsafe for various reasons. Many would like to avoid those areas. It isn't racist to identify them. Crime and risk are equal opportunity occurances, and not always race specific!
    • Patrick F  •  Cranbury, New Jersey  •  1 mth 16 days ago
      "Ghetto" is not a race. "Bad neighborhood" is not a race. For all anyone knows, any ghetto or bad neighborhood could feature any kinds of race. The app is not racist. Calm down people.
    • Dylan  •  Somerset, New Jersey  •  1 mth 16 days ago
      Microsoft only said "avoid high crime areas". Anyone that added a racial insinuation to that, is racist.
    • Al  •  New Orleans, Louisiana  •  1 mth 16 days ago
      The question in the headline is a perfect example of political correctness brought to the point of sheer stupidity. It is potentially lethal for a white person to enter any of the housing projects in New Orleans; if there's something to help people avoid those areas, it is a life-saver. The racists are the ones in the projects; the people avoiding the projects are potential murder victims.
    • Steven  •  1 mth 16 days ago
      I hope that in 2012 people realize that 'race' and 'ghetto' are two separate ideas.
    • Coldie  •  1 mth 15 days ago
      Since when is avoiding high-crime areas racist?
    • Fed Up  •  Chicago, Illinois  •  1 mth 16 days ago
      If they clean up their neighborhoods, stop protecting the gangbangers and join the rest of society - these neighborhoods don't need to be unsafe, but until then - work to fix the problem - don't pretend it doesn't exsist or blame something in history for their situation.
      Seems minorities are claiming that criminal activity is their racial right!
    • Comment  •  1 mth 16 days ago
      If it's based on crime statistics and you are walking through an area with high crime I would think that's useful to know for anyone regardless of what race you are. I would be even more insulted by insinuating that crime and race are one and the same but that's just me.
    • Amber B  •  Duluth, Minnesota  •  1 mth 16 days ago
      I see nothing wrong with it... I'm white and i live in a "ghetto" and near a bunch of sex offenders. (if I had an iPhone an app for referencing them would be nice, not that i could afford one!) It's better to avoid places you might have trouble, especially if you're a woman or unfamiliar with a neighborhood or it's night.
    • Mooshi  •  Livonia, Michigan  •  1 mth 16 days ago
      If I refuse to walk through Detroit at night wearing a rolex watch and gold chain, am I a racist?
    • kathy m  •  Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania  •  1 mth 15 days ago
      politically correctness sucks. tell it like it is, i say.
    • Vincent  •  Atlanta, Georgia  •  1 mth 16 days ago
      Hmm. Maybe they could color code the zones based on the type of crime that is most prevelant. It could help you find drugs and prostitutes a lot easier if you are in an unfamiliar city. lol
    • Freeman  •  1 mth 16 days ago
      The APP deals with crime statistics.......... to infer that its racist to provide data on statistically high crime areas to travelers so they can avoid them is just stupid.
    • Cheeses K. Reist  •  Hamburg, Germany  •  1 mth 16 days ago
      There's nothing racist about an app like that. It is just statistics. It will help people avoid areas with high crime statistics. If I was in an unknown city, I'd love this feature. You Americans are getting waaay too sensitive.
    • 1Salvo  •  Dallas, Texas  •  1 mth 16 days ago
      Who is up in arms? Muggers? Free tip Avoid all intersections marked MLK and Malcom X. Nothing good happens there after 12............. p.m..
    • PAUL  •  1 mth 16 days ago
      Race-baiters will always find what they want to find.