“That is one butch chick,” is the Gender Genie’s unchanging comment when I once again inform it (him? her?) that I am, in fact, not male. Its verdict has a very funny side since I am not butch either, though several of my dearest friends are, and proud of it, and I of them. But that’s another story.
The Gender Genie eats texts, digests them and comes up with an opinion about the writer’s gender. (I’m inclined to write “sex” instead of “gender” whenever appropriate, but here “gender” does fit better.) The program behind the input box searches the text for “masculine” and “feminine” keywords, assigns a weight to them, and calculates a male and a female score. Whichever is higher determines whether, to the genie, your texts look masculine or feminine. Its success rate, according to user feedback, is only about 62.5%, but this number can’t be very reliable: Are you more likely to tell the genie that it was wrong or that it was right? Is there any indication that the likelihood of a user giving feedback is the same in both cases?
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