Current:Home > 新闻中心Drones warned New York City residents about storm flooding. The Spanish translation was no bueno -MarketLink
Drones warned New York City residents about storm flooding. The Spanish translation was no bueno
View
Date:2025-04-18 14:16:22
NEW YORK (AP) — New York City emergency management officials have apologized for a hard-to-understand flood warning issued in Spanish by drones flying overhead in some neighborhoods.
City officials had touted the high-tech message-delivery devices ahead of expected flash flooding Tuesday. But when video of a drone delivering the warning in English and Spanish was shared widely on social media, users quickly mocked the pronunciation of the Spanish version delivered to a city where roughly a quarter of all residents speak the language at home.
“How is THAT the Spanish version? It’s almost incomprehensible,” one user posted on X. “Any Spanish speaking NYer would do better.”
“The city couldn’t find a single person who spoke Spanish to deliver this alert?” another incredulous X user wrote.
“It’s unfortunate because it sounds like a literal google translation,” added another.
Zach Iscol, the city’s emergency management commissioner, acknowledged on X that the muddled translation “shouldn’t have happened” and promised that officials were working to “make sure it doesn’t happen again.”
In a follow-up post, he provided the full text of the message as written in Spanish and explained that the problem was in the recording of the message, not the translation itself.
Iscol’s agency has said the message was computer generated and went out in historically flood-prone areas in four of the city’s five boroughs: Queens, the Bronx, Brooklyn and Staten Island.
Flash floods have been deadly for New Yorkers living in basement apartments, which can quickly fill up in a deluge. Eleven people drowned in such homes in 2021 as the remnants of Hurricane Ida drenched the city.
In follow-up emails Wednesday, the agency noted that the drone messaging effort was a first-of-its-kind pilot for the city and was “developed and approved following our standard protocols, just like all our public communications.” It declined to say what changes would be made going forward.
In an interview with The New York Times, Iscol credited Mayor Eric Adams with the initial idea.
“You know, we live in a bubble, and we have to meet people where they are in notifications so they can be prepared,” the Democrat said at a press briefing Tuesday.
Adams, whose office didn’t immediately comment Wednesday, is a self-described “tech geek” whose administration has embraced a range of curious-to-questionable technological gimmicks.
His office raised eyebrows last year when it started using artificial intelligence to make robocalls that contorted the mayor’s own voice into several languages he doesn’t actually speak, including Mandarin and Yiddish.
The administration has also tapped drone technology to monitor large gatherings and search for sharks on beaches.
The city’s police department, meanwhile, briefly toyed with using a robot to patrol the Times Square subway station.
Last month, it unveiled new AI-powered scanners to help keep guns out of the nation’s busiest subway system. That pilot effort, though, is already being met with skepticism from riders and the threat of a lawsuit from civil liberties advocates.
___
Follow Philip Marcelo at twitter.com/philmarcelo.
veryGood! (4129)
Related
- All That You Wanted to Know About She’s All That
- Facebook takes down China-based network spreading false COVID-19 claims
- Amazon faces another union vote, this time at a Staten Island warehouse
- Scientists are creating stronger coral reefs in record time – by gardening underwater
- Louvre will undergo expansion and restoration project, Macron says
- Send in the clones: Using artificial intelligence to digitally replicate human voices
- Amazon announces progress after an outage disrupted sites across the internet
- Why The Challenge's Johnny Bananas Says He Has Nothing Left to Prove
- Federal hiring is about to get the Trump treatment
- Senators aim to rewrite child safety rules on social media
Ranking
- Meta releases AI model to enhance Metaverse experience
- Why Curly Girls Everywhere Love Tracee Ellis Ross' Pattern Hair Care
- Below Deck's Ben & Leigh-Ann Finally Hook Up in Steamy Preview Amid His Boatmance With Camille
- Apple's Tim Cook wins restraining order against woman, citing trespassing and threats
- Arkansas State Police probe death of woman found after officer
- Kenyan cult deaths at 73, president likens them to terrorism
- Former Theranos CEO Elizabeth Holmes to be sentenced on Sept. 26
- Megan Fox Ditches Engagement Ring Amid Machine Gun Kelly Breakup Rumors
Recommendation
Don't let hackers fool you with a 'scam
What the Joe Rogan podcast controversy says about the online misinformation ecosystem
An undersea cable fault could cut Tonga from the rest of the world for weeks
1 American dead in Sudan as U.S. readies troops for potential embassy evacuation amid heavy fighting
Rams vs. 49ers highlights: LA wins rainy defensive struggle in key divisional game
These $33 Combat Boots Come In Four Colors and They Have 7,500+ 5-Star Amazon Reviews
Transcript: Kansas City Mayor Quinton Lucas on Face the Nation, April 23, 2023
Jonathan Van Ness Honors Sweet Queer Eye Alum Tom Jackson After His Death