Geo-Tagging Issue Resolved: Twitter Issues Clarification On Showing J&K As Chinese Territory, Calls It A 'Technical Issue'
A Twitter spokesperson called it a technical issue, one which they said has
been swiftly resolved.
Twitter on Monday responded to the controversies about an error in a
geo-tagging issue, where Jammu and Kashmir was shown as a territory of China
during a live broadcast by a senior journalist, saying the issue has been
addressed. A Twitter spokesperson called it a technical issue, one which they
said has been swiftly resolved.
In Nitin Gokhale’s live broadcast from Leh’s Hall of Fame, a war memorial for
the fallen soldiers in the Union territory of Ladakh, Twitter’s geotagging
feature displayed ‘Jammu and Kashmir as part of China.’
We became aware of this technical issue on Sunday, & understand & respect the sensitivities around it. Teams have worked swiftly to investigate & resolve the concerned geotag issue: Twitter Spokesperson on location tag in a live broadcast showing Jammu & Kashmir as part of China. pic.twitter.com/UqpCCgma1q
— ANI (@ANI) October 19, 2020
“Twitter folks, I just did a live from the Hall of Fame. Giving Hall of Fame
as the location and guess what it is saying Jammu & Kashmir, Peoples
Republic of China! Are you guys nuts?” Gokhale had tweeted.
Other Twitter users also immediately pointed out the issue. Following the
incident, multiple other users also started live broadcasts or tweeted with
the location set as Hall of Fame, Leh. However, the issue seemed to persist
for all users. Users aware of the incident also shared screenshots confirming
the issue.
Gokhale in his next tweet, called the incident outrageous and urged other
users to try the same. He said, “Tweeple pl put Hall of Fame Leh as your
location for live broadcast and see what’s happening. It shows location as
Jammu and Kashmir, Peoples Republic of China. I tested it again. Outrageous.
Pl flood Twitter with complaints. GoI should take immediate action. @rsprasad”
So @Twitter has decided to reconfigure geography and declare Jammu & Kashmir as part of People's Republic of #China . If this is not a violation of #India laws, what is? Citizens of India have been punished for far less. But US Big Tech is above the law? @nitingokhale @rsprasad pic.twitter.com/euelMvCxTy
— Kanchan Gupta (@KanchanGupta) October 18, 2020
“Am surprised by the line on the visual …” tweeted one user sharing a
screenshot of the live broadcast with the location wrongly displayed. “Why it
is showing J & k , People’s Republic of China?” another user replied.
A flurry of tweets tagging the official handles of Twitter and Twitter India
flooded the platform demanding explanations. The government and concerned
departments were also mentioned in the tweets.
The incident comes at a time of the ongoing border tensions between India and
China.
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