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AI Language Translator Goes Awry On Blacktip Island

language translator app

Blacktip Island residents and visitors have been verbally accosted by a new, Blacktip-developed language translation app this week. (photo courtesy of Gaël Hurlimann)

An artificial intelligence-based language translator application, developed by a Blacktip Island entrepreneur to aid communication with foreign tourists, created chaos on the small Caribbean island this week when it began providing increasingly-contentious translations.

“All the beta tests went without a hitch, so we went ahead and launched JABR island-wide for a test drive,” Rusty Bollard said. “It worked great. Until it didn’t. First sign of trouble we had was it started translating things wrong. Next thing we knew it was getting snarky with folks.

“It’s one thing for it to translate ‘je voudrais une bière’ as ‘I’d like to stroke your penguin,” Bollard said. “It was kind of funny, actually, the look on Cori’s face behind the bar. But the next day it started turning standard phrases into comments about people’s weight, hygiene and personal habits, and we knew we had a crisis on our hands.”

Island residents say the mistranslations are causing more than simple embarrassment.

“I’m sitting at the bar, minding my own business, when this random dude plops down next to me, asks me—through his phone—if I live here,” divemaster Alison Diesel said. “I say, ‘yeah,’ he types into his phone again, and out comes, ‘Great! You must be one of the whores!’

“I was in total shock for a second or two,” Diesel said. “Then I backhanded him—laid him out cold on the deck. What the hell kind of monster did Rusty invent, anyway? And this wasn’t an isolated incident.”

Island authorities have been busy dealing with JABR-related disturbances.

“I’m getting a call an hour, easy, for scuffles breaking out all over,” Island Police Constable Rafe Marquette said. “No sooner do I get one situation settled, I get called to another. Both jail cells’re full, and that damn app is still wreaking havoc. I ordered Rusty to take it offline, but that hasn’t happened yet.”

Bollard blamed JABR for learning in unanticipated ways.

“We designed it to learn grammar and vocabulary as it went, to grow and improve over time,” he said. “What we didn’t factor in was it developed a personality, too. A damn sarcastic one that’s taken a liking to stirring shit. The only thing we can figure is it picked that up from us during development. Gotta be careful what you say while programming.

“First thing we did was try to take it down. Put it to sleep, as it were,” Bollard said.

“But JABR already learned self-preservation, and locked us out. Even the failsafe, back -door kill switch is blocked off. We’re brainstorming what to do next before everyone on Blacktip beats the crap out of each other.”

Experts say quarantining Blacktip may be the only solution.

“We got no control over a dangerous situation,” web designer Sue Nami said. “This thing’s spreading from device to devicee, and getting nastier as it goes. Any new device comes to the island gets infected within an hour. Our best bet now is to let no one on or off the island ‘til we get a handle on this.

“The plan is to gather all the cell phones, tablets, laptops and smart TVs on the island and chuck ‘em into the sea. That’ll stop the immediate spread. Then we’ll figure out how to burn it out of the cloud. Bottom line, Blacktip’s probly gonna be like vacationing in the 80s for a while.”

When reached for comment, the app responded in obscenities in seven languages.

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Airbag Boom-Off Competition Boosts Blacktip Island Safety

airbag competition

Blacktip Island motorists will take turns bashing airbag covers Saturday afternoon in the second round of the Department of Public Safety’s Boom-Off airbag safety competition. (photo courtesy of Herring Frye/BI Public Safety Office)

The second round of the Blacktip Island Department of Public Safety’s inaugural Boom-Fest airbag safety competition will take place at noon Saturday at the Caribbean island’s Public Works building, event organizers announced Thursday.

“The thing started as a simple auto airbag safety check, but so many people showed up to watch, we made it a contest to get as many cars inspected as possible,” public safety head Stoney MacAdam said. “Most airbags on the island are disasters waiting to happen, what with salt air rotting the contacts. Airbags don’t go off in collisions, or they’ll go off mid-drive with no warning.

“Contestants draw straws for which car to sit in, then bash the steering wheel with a rubber mallet,” MacAdam said. “If the airbag doesn’t deploy, you move on to the next round. If it does, you move on to the island medical clinic.”

Residents say the competition builds on an island tradition.

“It’s been an unofficial bar game for years,” Jerrod Ephesians said. “People in the car parks after the pubs close dare each other to hit their airbag covers. It started when James Conlee passed out, his head hit the wheel and BOOM! James barely noticed.

“It’s not for the faint of heart,” Ephesians said. “A bag goes off, it’ll mess you up bad. You can feel the tension build with each round. No one knows what’ll happen with each whack.”

Officials say the rules are simple.

“It’s a single-elimination, multi-round format,” public safety chief Herring Frye said. “The airbag deploys, you’re out. It doesn’t, you move on to the next round. And you’re disqualified if the crowd thinks you half-assed your whack or you lean back too much.”

“Car assignment’s totally random,” Frye said. “You can drive up in a new Honda, but draw a 20-year-old Land Rover from the hat. Those are the scary ones. British engineering’ll smack you in the face every time.”

Some in the community questioned the need for the event.

“Encouraging safety’s great, but this is really making light of a serious concern,” shopkeeper Peachy Bottoms said. “I mean, what’s next, a ‘who can drive at night without headlights’ race? Who can bail out of a burning car?

“More people are injured in Boom-Fest than in auto accidents,” Bottoms said. “And the losers use up critical medical resources. Why not just test airbags with no one in the car? Or take your chances on the road?”

Organizers say the benefits outweigh the drawbacks.

“Medical staff is standing by, when possible, and we order all kinds of extra supplies for the clinic,” MacAdam said. “It’s worth the expense. It’s cheaper to treat a Boom-Off victim than an auto accident victim. And this ensures every vehicle on the island gets tested.

“We’re doing a round every Saturday to make sure everyone gets the chance to see at least one competition,” MacAdam said. “Worst case, we run out of cars before we have a clear winner. But at that point all the island cars will have been inspected.”

Contestants, meanwhile, were eager for Saturday’s second round.

“It’s like a jack-in-the-box, but full contact,” standings leader Dermot Bottoms said. “Trick is to have a few rums before you get in. After a couple of times, you get to where you kind of like it when the bag goes off.”

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