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In 2010 Nicaragua invaded Costa Rica.
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When asked why they'd seized territory,
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they claimed it belonged to them....
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On Google Maps.
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Who did Costa Rica turn to first? Nicaragua? The United Nations?
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No
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They went straight to Google, because in the eyes of the world Google Maps has become the de facto
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world map. Despite having no legal authority over international borders, Google have become the world's most powerful player.
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Borders are a uniquely human concept. In most of the world the only tangible legitimacy they have is through maps.
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But the cost and resources required to make a map are staggering. Until recently countries were the only ones who could afford it.
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Cartography was a nationalized industry, which meant no map was without bias or influence.
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Historically if you wanted to seize territory from a less powerful nation.
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You just re-drew the map.
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When questioned by locals, you show them the map. Ignore their claims of already living there, and hold up the only piece of real evidence that exists.
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This is basically how colonialism worked.
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But with more genocide.
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Probably the most extreme example is Africa. In 1884, 10% of Africa was under European control.
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Just 30 years later,
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this had risen to 90%.
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Land was negotiated from thousands of miles away and countries redrawn with little
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consideration for local or cultural boundaries. Yet the map drawn then remains largely
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unchanged today. Most would argue that today's map of Africa is correct. There is some objective truth to it, but 130 years ago
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it was nothing of the sort. Over time the existence of a map is self legitimising.
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While countries were the sole map makers it was fine if two states
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disagreed over a border. Each produced their own map and their citizens would rarely have a chance to see any other version.
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But as the internet arrived, nationalized mapping decreased and companies like Google started to fill the gap.
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An international company creating an international map for all.
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Not quite. Google still relies on the approval of nation states.
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It's all too easy to censor a website. Google only have to annoy one government to lose a
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country's worth of users. Any errors along the China-India border could lose them a third of the world's customers.
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The region of Arunachal Pradesh borders India, China, Bhutan and Myanmar. Administrated as a state of India,
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they keep a hundred thousand troops in the region.
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But China also claims ownership calling it South Tibet.
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Each country has laws to stop map makers drawing the border in the others favour, or even acknowledging the region's
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disputed. So Google creates three different maps...
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This is what two thirds of the world will see on Google Maps - the dotted line indicates disputed territory.
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But if you view the area from a Chinese domain it shows it belonging to China, and part of India from an Indian domain.
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No map maker previously had the ability to do this. Historically you had to pick sides.
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The average Chinese or Indian citizen would be unaware of any dispute. Or at least they would have been until Google
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accidentally switched the borders in 2007. This caused outrage in both countries.
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Many in China were unaware that most of the world didn't recognize China's legitimacy over the region. And members of the Indian Parliament
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accused Google of purposefully derailing an upcoming summit between the two nations.
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There are similar disputes all along the India-China border. All are heavily militarised, with regular standoffs, backed by two of the largest
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armies in the world, both with nuclear weapons.
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So just in case nobody noticed the first time round, Google managed to make the same mistake again in 2009.
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But the advantage of online maps is the speed they can be changed.
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A mistake of that magnitude 20 years ago would have taken years to correct instead of hours.
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Google can react to geo-political events quicker than any other map maker. When Russian troops arrived in Crimea in February
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2014, it was less than a month till Google showed the territory as disputed.
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This was despite the United Nations asking nobody...."…to recognise any alteration of the status of Crimea."
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Google Maps in Russia shows Crimea as Russian territory, and Ukrainian when viewed from Ukraine.
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The fact that Google are willing to ignore
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UN resolutions is a big deal. Countries do all the time, they protect their own interests and alliances above other nations.
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But Google is a company who now has the power and influence of a state.
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They're big enough to survive any confrontation with the UN and probably see Russia as the worse enemy to make.
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The UN moves slowly. The United Nations
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Regional Cartographic Conference, only meets every three or four years. Google have to make border and naming decisions daily. Those decisions may not have any legal
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weight, but everyone uses Google Maps so in reality
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they're the most important. When South Sudan became a country in
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2011, the vote didn't specify the exact placement of the border. Leaving some towns and villages
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unsure whether they would be in Sudan or South Sudan. Each country naturally claimed ownership,
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but no official map would be made for a while. It was left to Google to organize South Sudan community mapping events. They encouraged local
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people to create detailed maps of an area that was lacking any accurate data.
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And through a semi-democratic process, an almost-precise border was decided. There are still
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contested areas today, and not without their bloodshed.
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But Google did more to help local territorial disputes than the UN or any state.
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This isn't the only example of Google using local input as the basis for their maps.
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They publish a program called Google Map Maker, this allows anyone to make changes in suggestions.
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This is useful for new roads and public footpaths, but also helps Google decide what to call things.
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It's strictly moderated and Google have final say over the public version, but like Wikipedia things inevitably slip through the cracks...
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For obvious reasons you can't edit the border of a country. There are hundreds of disputes in the world - imagine the chaos.
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So Google don't get involved with most of them.
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But here and there throughout the world map, it does change slightly based on where you're stood. This may not necessarily be a bad thing.
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Historically the larger power would just stamp out the smaller one.
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But with Google Maps as the unofficial-official adjudicator,
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borders could remain disputed forever. Both sides constantly pointing guns at the other
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but rarely firing. Is a long cold war better than a short hot one?
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That's a philosophical question best left for the comments. But for better
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or worse Google are making editorial decisions on something most people view as an objective truth.
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No political map can ever be a hundred percent accurate in the scientific sense of the word. At best they can be a diplomatic
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compromise, and at worse they can be a propaganda tool. Maps (and especially Google Maps) are amazing,
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but they should be treated it like any other media.
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They are subject to the motives and influences of the humans that made them.
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