MapWatch: Detecting and Monitoring International Border Personalization on Online Maps

Gary Soeller, Karrie Karahalios, Christian Sandvig, Christo Wilson
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引用次数: 23

Abstract

Maps have long played a crucial role in enabling people to conceptualize and navigate the world around them. However, maps also encode the world-views of their creators. Disputed international borders are one example of this: governments may mandate that cartographers produce maps that conform to their view of a territorial dispute. Today, online maps maintained by private corporations have become the norm. However, these new maps are still subject to old debates. Companies like Google and Bing resolve these disputes by localizing their maps to meet government requirements and user preferences, i.e., users in different locations are shown maps with different international boundaries. We argue that this non-transparent personalization of maps may exacerbate nationalistic disputes by promoting divergent views of geopolitical realities. To address this problem, we present MapWatch, our system for detecting and cataloging personalization of international borders in online maps. Our system continuously crawls all map tiles from Google and Bing maps, and leverages crowdworkers to identify border personalization. In this paper, we present the architecture of MapWatch, and analyze the instances of border personalization on Google and Bing, including one border change that MapWatch identified live, as Google was rolling out the update.
MapWatch:检测和监控在线地图上的国际边界个性化
长期以来,地图一直在帮助人们对周围的世界进行概念化和导航方面发挥着至关重要的作用。然而,地图也编码了其创造者的世界观。有争议的国际边界就是一个例子:政府可能会要求制图师绘制符合他们对领土争端看法的地图。如今,由私人公司维护的在线地图已成为常态。然而,这些新地图仍然受到旧争论的影响。谷歌(Google)和必应(Bing)等公司通过本地化地图来解决这些争议,以满足政府的要求和用户的偏好,即向不同地点的用户展示具有不同国际边界的地图。我们认为,这种不透明的地图个性化可能会通过促进对地缘政治现实的不同看法而加剧民族主义争端。为了解决这个问题,我们提出了MapWatch,这是我们在在线地图中检测和编目个性化国际边界的系统。我们的系统不断地从谷歌和必应地图中抓取所有地图,并利用众包工作者来识别边界个性化。在本文中,我们介绍了MapWatch的架构,并分析了谷歌和必应上的边界个性化实例,包括MapWatch在谷歌推出更新时实时识别的一个边界更改。
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