←back to thread

1456 points pulisse | 1 comments | | HN request time: 0.213s | source
Show context
tinus_hn ◴[] No.21182965[source]
In other news, when you were able to visit Google Maps in China you would see the Chinese view of the world where disputed regions are part of China, while the rest of the world would see something else.

https://qz.com/224821/see-how-borders-change-on-google-maps-...

replies(4): >>21183147 #>>21183186 #>>21183340 #>>21186092 #
paxys ◴[] No.21183340[source]
This is true for every country in the world. Google Maps in the US displays borders/countries which the US government recognizes.
replies(3): >>21183597 #>>21183811 #>>21186278 #
unethical_ban ◴[] No.21183597[source]
I disagree. You may see "contested" borders, but not outright US policy. For example, the US recognizes the sovereignty of Kosovo, but Google Maps shows it as a dotted border. And Wikipedia accurately describes it as a disputed state.
replies(1): >>21183727 #
dheera ◴[] No.21183727[source]
Recognition of one side or another in a foreign dispute is a little different than having your own dispute or claim.

Guantanamo Bay (disputed between US/Cuba) used to be marked as US territory in Google Maps at least when viewed from the US, although interestingly, I'm looking at it now it doesn't say Cuba / United States along the border anymore.

I can't imagine the amount of crap they must go through on the backend to deal with these idiotic human politics. Humans suck.

replies(3): >>21183858 #>>21183906 #>>21186375 #
1. wahern ◴[] No.21186375[source]
You assume that maps are uniform throughout the U.S., or that the U.S. government mandates certain depictions. They're not, and the government does not, except for the maps it purchases for itself.

Whatever Google depicts is what Google chooses to depict; and what they pick, at least in the U.S., is a function of what they believe people expect to see or need to see. They depict Taiwan as a separate state despite the U.S. government not recognizing them as such because it's what people expect to see. It's trivial to find maps in the U.S. depicting any alternative you desire. Equivocating popularity with government-mandated depictions is not constructive.