This article is from the source 'guardian' and was first published or seen on . It last changed over 40 days ago and won't be checked again for changes.
You can find the current article at its original source at http://www.theguardian.com/technology/2015/may/20/where-does-google-maps-think-you-are
The article has changed 7 times. There is an RSS feed of changes available.
Version 0 | Version 1 |
---|---|
Where does Google Maps think you are? | Where does Google Maps think you are? |
(35 minutes later) | |
Google is in hot water today over some search results on its Maps pages, after it was discovered that a search for “nigger king” brings up the White House as a result. The company apologised, but not before other awkward results were discovered: in London, for instance, a search for “shit hole” brings up Tottenham Hotspur’s football ground. | Google is in hot water today over some search results on its Maps pages, after it was discovered that a search for “nigger king” brings up the White House as a result. The company apologised, but not before other awkward results were discovered: in London, for instance, a search for “shit hole” brings up Tottenham Hotspur’s football ground. |
It is a law of the internet that any story involving weird search results eventually leads to people vanity searching, and sure enough, that’s what we did. And the results were interesting. | It is a law of the internet that any story involving weird search results eventually leads to people vanity searching, and sure enough, that’s what we did. And the results were interesting. |
If you type my name, Alex Hern, into Google, it brings you, not to the Guardian, where I work (and which would make sense), but to the pub in London Bridge where I play the card game Netrunner most weeks. To the best of my knowledge, I’ve been linked online to that pub once, ever. | If you type my name, Alex Hern, into Google, it brings you, not to the Guardian, where I work (and which would make sense), but to the pub in London Bridge where I play the card game Netrunner most weeks. To the best of my knowledge, I’ve been linked online to that pub once, ever. |
Similarly, my colleague Samuel Gibbs found that his name takes him to Imperial College, his old university – but again, somewhere he’s not widely linked to online. | Similarly, my colleague Samuel Gibbs found that his name takes him to Imperial College, his old university – but again, somewhere he’s not widely linked to online. |
Intrigued, we took it to social media, and found more strange results: | Intrigued, we took it to social media, and found more strange results: |
Charlotte Geater is linked to her old Oxford college: | Charlotte Geater is linked to her old Oxford college: |
@alexhern if you type me in you get my college at oxford, wtf, why is this a thing | @alexhern if you type me in you get my college at oxford, wtf, why is this a thing |
Artist Jamie McKelvie is linked to the comic shop Gosh! in Soho: | Artist Jamie McKelvie is linked to the comic shop Gosh! in Soho: |
@alexhern holy shit pic.twitter.com/VuVyn7ij91 | @alexhern holy shit pic.twitter.com/VuVyn7ij91 |
And Vice journalist Joel Golby, future prime minister, is somehow located in 10 Downing Street: | And Vice journalist Joel Golby, future prime minister, is somehow located in 10 Downing Street: |
@alexhern ALEX I JUST TYPED MY NAME IN AND IT WENT STRAIGHT TO 10 DOWNING STREET | @alexhern ALEX I JUST TYPED MY NAME IN AND IT WENT STRAIGHT TO 10 DOWNING STREET |
Citymetric editor Jonn Elledge is pinned to his old publication, Londonist: | Citymetric editor Jonn Elledge is pinned to his old publication, Londonist: |
@alexhern Okay, I assumed this was some kind of joke, but I put my name into Google Maps and this happened pic.twitter.com/J07UAYLQTQ | @alexhern Okay, I assumed this was some kind of joke, but I put my name into Google Maps and this happened pic.twitter.com/J07UAYLQTQ |
While BuzzFeed writer Robin Edds, author of The 41 Most British Things That Have Ever Happened, gets linked to… Things British, a shop in St Pancras Station. | While BuzzFeed writer Robin Edds, author of The 41 Most British Things That Have Ever Happened, gets linked to… Things British, a shop in St Pancras Station. |
All in all: faintly baffling. Sometimes it makes sense, sometimes it makes sense but is super creepy (HOW DO THEY KNOW) and sometimes you just have to ask what Google is thinking. | All in all: faintly baffling. Sometimes it makes sense, sometimes it makes sense but is super creepy (HOW DO THEY KNOW) and sometimes you just have to ask what Google is thinking. |
Try it with your own names, and post what you find below. We’ll get to the bottom of this! | Try it with your own names, and post what you find below. We’ll get to the bottom of this! |
Update: | |
Alicia Melville-Smith gets placed in a restaurant she’s been to before: | |
@alexhern I just did it with my Twitter handle & it came up with a restaurant I went to last week for the first time. CREEPY | |
Robert Perry’s results are even creepier: | |
@alexhern Mine offers me three choices: Where I went to university My former employer WHERE I AM RIGHT NOW | |
Coincidentally, Australian cybersecurity journalist Asher Wolf started a similar exploration of the topic just two days ago, searching for Twitter handles instead of full names: | |
Google Maps, why you do this? pic.twitter.com/cmjd2hIvqZ | |
.@thejaymo @Asher_Wolf Apparently, Google thinks I’m a charming little “erotic massage” parlor in Schleswig-Holstein. pic.twitter.com/YsS2mz2zDg | |
@Quasilocal @Asher_Wolf mine pins me at Mortgage Success in Wollongong where I got my mortgage sorted 12 months ago!? | |
And her exploration prompted writer Hank van Ess to delve deep into the topic: | |
Type in a name of a living person and Google Maps will try to match your name to a databases based on data of a local Chambers of Commerce or a similar source. This handy feature only works if the person is registered as part of a company, organisation, university or foundation. | |
If someone is not in the database, you often get results anyway. The reason: Google Maps tries to guess a name that is close to the one you used. So always concentrate on the logic of the answer. | |
Of course, that still doesn’t explain how Google knows where I play Netrunner… |