Entertainment

Google Apologizes After Push Notification Includes Racial Slur

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Source: Danny Price Instagram / Shutterstock / Canva Pro

Most people do not expect to encounter hateful language while checking the weather or skimming headlines. That is why many users said they froze when a Google push notification about the 2026 BAFTA Film Awards included a fully spelled-out racial slur. The alert appeared like any other news update, which made the moment feel even more jarring.

The incident unfolded days after the BAFTAs ceremony in London on February. A clip and screenshots of the notification spread across social media, and many people assumed a form of artificial intelligence had generated the language. Google later said that was not the case, but it still apologized.

As the backlash spread, attention shifted from the single notification to the chain of events that produced it. People wanted to know where the wording came from, how it made it through Google’s systems, and why the alert was able to land on phones at all.

How the Alert Reached People’s Phones

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According to reporting from the BBC, Google sent a news alert about fallout from the BAFTAs that prompted users to “see more” on the slur, with the word written out in full. Google said it removed the notification quickly and described it as a mistake that should not have happened.

The issue gained traction after Instagram user Danny Price posted about it, and then more users began sharing screenshots. In one widely circulated post, viewers framed the alert as a shocking example of a system failing in a very personal place: the lock screen.

Newsweek later reported that artist and activist Malynda Hale shared a screenshot that came from her friend Lydia René, a Los Angeles musician. René said she took the screenshot immediately because she thought no one would believe her if she did not have proof, and she described seeing it at the top of her phone notifications.

The BAFTAs Moment Behind the Notification

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The notification was tied to an incident at the EE BAFTA Film Awards on February 22, 2026. During an onstage segment with actors Michael B. Jordan and Delroy Lindo, Tourette’s campaigner John Davidson shouted the slur as an involuntary vocal tic.

Davidson is the executive producer of the BAFTA-nominated film “I Swear,” which is based on his life. Coverage of the event described Davidson as living with Tourette syndrome and coprolalia, a condition that can involve involuntary outbursts of obscene or socially inappropriate words. Davidson later apologized for the outburst, and the BBC and BAFTAs also issued apologies.

The moment was not edited out during the delayed broadcast, and it initially remained available on the BBC’s streaming service. That handling prompted criticism, including reports of at least one BAFTA jury member stepping down. Lindo later told Vanity Fair he wished someone from BAFTA had spoken to him and Jordan afterward.

What Google Says Went Wrong and Why It Still Matters

Source: Shutterstock

Google said the offensive alert was not created by generative AI. Instead, it explained that its systems recognized a euphemism for the slur across multiple web pages and mistakenly inserted the offensive term into the notification text. The company said its safety filters did not trigger as they should, and it is working to improve the guardrails that prevent this kind of language from being pushed out.

Google also said only a very small subset of users received the notification. Even so, the screenshots spread widely, and that visibility mattered. People who did not receive the alert still encountered it through reposts and reaction videos, which widened the impact far beyond the original audience.

Commentary from Word In Black captured why the distinction between AI and automation did not feel comforting for many Black readers. The piece argued that system errors still come from systems built and maintained by people, and that labeling harm as accidental can sound like a way to avoid accountability. The incident has now become part of a larger debate about how tech platforms handle race, moderation, and trust when the stakes are personal and immediate.

Marie Calapano

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