US senator and presidential candidate Elizabeth Warren has said that the Apple Card‘s “sexist” algorithm should be withdrawn if the claimed bias cannot be explained…

Background

The controversy began when Ruby on Rails creator David Hansson tweeted that Goldman Sachs gave him an Apple Card credit limit 20 times higher than his wife, despite the fact that their assets are shared, and she actually has a better credit score than he does.

Apple cofounder Steve Wozniak reported the same, in his case noting that his limit is 10 times higher than that of his wife, again despite shared assets that should make them equally creditworthy.

Hansson said that although the issue was resolved after his tweet went viral, it brings into question the algorithm used to determine Apple Card credit limits.

Goldman Sachs’ response to Apple Card sexism claims

The bank originally issued a brief statement stating that each person’s credit line is evaluated uniquely, based on a range of factors that include income, credit score, debt, and how debt has been managed. Taking all of this into account, it says, different family members could be offered different limits.

When the controversy didn’t go away, Goldman issued a new statement stating that its evaluation system is not aware of the gender or marital status of the applicant, and offered to re-evaluate the credit limit of anyone who felt an error had been made.

Elizabeth Warren speaks out

Warren has echoed Hansson’s concern that Goldman appears unable to explain how the algorithm works or why it would make the Apple Card appear sexist in its determination of credit limits, reports Reuters.

She rejected the bank’s current stance of inviting people to contact customer support if they were unhappy with their credit limit.

So far, the Apple Card issuer has only repeated its claim that the process is not sexist.

“We are beginning to understand better that algorithms are only as good as the data that gets packed into them,” Warren added.

Warren has previously accused Apple of attempting to “snuff out competition” and called for the breakup of tech giants. In Apple’s case, she says, the company should not be able to run the App Store and offer its own apps.

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