GOOGLE and Bing are providing disgusting auto-suggestions including "Trump should be shot" and "Trump should be killed".

All you have to do is type in 13 letters for the curated search predictions to pop up on Microsoft's Bing.

6 Bing's search predictions for "Trump should be". Credit: Indivigital

6 Google's search predictions for "conservatives need". Credit: Indivigital

Just enter "Trump should be" and the search engine will do the rest, according to Indivigital.

On the other hand, the results for Barack Obama appear to have been more carefully curated.

Enter "Obama should be" on Bing and only two auto-complete suggestions will pop up: “Obama should be quiet” and “Obama should be allowed to Royal Wedding” – neither of which are comparably as offensive.

Google's auto-suggestions also surface plenty of derogatory automated suggestions that span the entire political spectrum.

Type in "black conservatives are" and you'll be shown "black conservatives uncle tom's", a term traditionally used against black people to suggest they were subservient to whites.

6 Google's derogatory search predictions for "black conservatives". Credit: Indivigital

6 Google seems to be surfacing offensive suggestions across the political spectrum. Credit: Indivigital

The full range of search predictions for that sequence of innocent words also includes "black conservatives are sellouts".

Then there's "conservatives need" – just two words that bring up one shocking suggestion: "conservatives need to die".

We've reached out to both Bing and Google for comment, and will update this article with their respective responses.

Other offensive Google search predictions for otherwise clean queries included: "Obama is a stupid...b**stard" and "liberals are...parasites".

Last month, the big G broke down how its search works and how it can go wrong in a blog post.

The feature – which is available across the Google home page, Google app for iPhone and Android and in the Chrome web browser's address bar – uses algorithms to offer predictions for your search queries.

6 Google's search algorithms have been accused of left-wing bias in the past Credit: PA:Press Association

These are based on a number of factors including real-time searches, trending results, your location, and previous activity.

The intuitive predictions change in "response to new characters being entered into the search box" explains Google.

And the company also has its own set of "autocomplete policies" in case something untoward should pop up.

Along with prohibiting predictions that contain sexually explicit, violent, and harmful terms, Google says it also removes hateful suggestions against groups and individuals.

"We remove predictions that include graphic descriptions of violence or advocate violence generally," states the firm.

6 "Trump should be shot" was still appearing on Google search at the time of writing Credit: AFP or licensors

Bing, which has a 33 percent share of the search market in the US, similarly uses algorithms to power its Autosuggest feature.

This isn't the first time Google's predictions have proven controversial.

In 2014, it was revealed that derogatory slurs were being tacked on to searches for cities and towns in the UK, including “why is Bradford so full of P****?”.

Two years later, Google was forced to remove results from autocomplete after an investigation by The Observer discovered it was inserting derogatory suggestions to the end of queries like “are Jews,” including the word “evil”.

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“Users search for such a wide range of material on the web – 15% of searches we see every day are new. Because of this, terms that appear in autocomplete may be unexpected or unpleasant,” explained a Google spokesperson in 2016.

The company's search feature has also been accused of spreading false info with both a right-wing and left-wing bias in the past.

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