
Dieses Bild ist ein direkter visueller Beweis für die Verschleierung ziviler Koordinaten in China, sichtbar an der Grenze zwischen Hongkong und Shenzhen, wo zwei räumliche Regime aufeinandertreffen. Google Maps ist gezwungen, physikalisch korrekte Satellitenbilder mit Vektordaten zu überlagern, die durch Richtlinien mathematisch verändert wurden, und die Nichtübereinstimmung wird sichtbar. Die Brücke bewegte sich nicht. Die Darstellung des Raumes tat es.
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Von LordMoMA007
15 Kommentare
It would be funny if the rest of the world told China they needed to distort all of our roads.
Their own maps program has things depicted correctly, they just dont give accurate data to the rest of the world
At first I thought that it’s just someone misunderstanding different reference systems, just like almost all countries in Europe actually use ETRS89 which is shifted by almost a meter compared to WGS84 because it is anchored to the eurasian continental plate to avoid having to recalculate coordinates due to continental drift. But no, apparently all unofficial mapping of China is illegal and digital maps have to add some silly pseudo-random offset.
This sounds like the first line of a sci-fi novel…
„People in China living in a distorted space“ is an interesting framing for „Google Maps is wrong in China“.
Whatever you think about the PRC’s policy regarding Google Maps, believing that Google Maps represents objective reality is almost more dystopian.
Interesting that Apple Maps gets it right – no distortions!
Google maps is just wrong in China.
Remibds me that time I went to Lao Cai in Vietnam.
I looked at google maps before, and I was wondering how they were handling customs with all these roads over the river between Vietnam and China. Looked like quite a cool place.
Turned out there was only one bridge between Vietnam and China.
OpenStreetMap does not have this problem.
(I cannot post links because for reason automod thinks I am using links shortener)
love the projection labels.
Why does China do this? What benefit do they get from it?
I consider myself reasonably intelligent. I have no idea what any of this means.
Every map of china we have is distorted. Tom Scott did a video on it iirc
In the Google Maps app, roads are displayed correctly. I believe that for some reason, this error only appears in the web version, and Google would have the ability to fix it.
In case you are wondering, Apple Maps works just alright in China, they work with a Chinese map provider, Gaode aka Amap, which you can also download their app directly.
A platform that is banned in China showing wrong China data. Shocking