Ask HN: Can you help me remove the marks for the airstrikes from Google Maps?
But it's about to change. Today I stumbled upon information about supposed marks for the airstrikes on Google Maps.
I tried cheking information myself and found it very believable. Replicate as follows:
1. Search for Dnipro on Google Maps
2. Enter фермерське господарство (means farm on Ukrainian, but there are no farms there) in search
3. Do not press enter and look for auto-complete: Those are supposed targets.
Those marks are unusual: you can’t even report them. I never seen anything like this.
Video demonstration here:
https://youtu.be/OHGsFCfuB_k
This may save lives, including people I know. That’s why I need your help.
Important Edit: I have to clarify that in my opinion these are more probably marks for saboteurs to make real-world marks on the specified locations.
Examples here: https://www.nzherald.co.nz/world/russia-invades-ukraine-secret-symbols-seen-in-ukraine-point-to-escalation-of-violence/ZRZPD5W7WRAWD3U32C4PHB273I/
159 comments
[ 3.2 ms ] story [ 223 ms ] thread[0] https://twitter.com/sbreakintl/status/1498619303717142529?s=...
None of this makes sense.
I know it feels good to feel like you're helping but I think you're being trolled by assholes on the internet.
If you know Russians this makes 100% perfect sense...
The solution isn't to remove it. Just move the locations slightly to an empty field nearby.
I worked for a company that worked with maps and our local authorities came over and asked us to move the locations of the bases just a bit. We did that. The logic is that they already know the base is there. Just move it a bit and if it looks close enough they will get small things wrong. If it's too much they won't make the mistake of relying on the bad information.
It looked Something like this:
“MORNING IN KHARKIV 25/02”
Footage of armed vehicles moving on the city streets
1.2 million views
There's a lot of weird stuff happening, I find this plausible enough.
I don't listen in to Ukrainian radio so I cannot verify but I am sure someone here knows more if they want to tell. It seems at this point it is already a very open secret.
they suddenly found 100,000+ digital radios?
Does it? My 'knowledge' of war comes from movies, TV and video games, which is obviously nonsense. I know that. I know that my belief that military tech is a bit like the things you see in Call of Duty or a Marvel blockbuster is wrong, and that it's all special effects and creative license to make things look 'cool'. Learning that soldiers on the ground in an active warzone pull out a phone and use Google Maps wouldn't actually surprise me at all. They're cheap, reliable, and understood by everyone. The only reason I can think of not to use it is because Google can be forced to block your access. Maybe they don't care about that?
Separately, having coordination done via "www.google.com" DNS & SSL ClientHello makes it all but impossible to block without disconnecting the Internet for the entire country, at a time when access to information within the country is more essential than ever.
Everything about this sadly makes sense
Especially Google not keeping their word. https://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=30524898 https://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=30525030
On the whole though, I think HTTPS everywhere was still a net improvement, and we should probably be thanking Google for pushing it.
No special skills or tools needed, and the on-line behavior is really hard to distinguish from 'expected' behavior. Its a pretty nice, and really easy to use, covert channel.
At the very least, they are defacement, and google should pull them. Hopefully someone from their maps abuse team will take a look. HN search of articles in the last 24 hours should find the comments I’m referring to.
https://www.buzzfeednews.com/article/sarahemerson/russia-goo...
>Google uses neither k8s nor Docker internally.
It's so weird when people just go on the internet and lie about how things work with such utter confidence. No 'I believe', no 'if things are still done that way' just pure lies typed as fact.
Should be an account ban, really.
(Them, not you.)
There are well established grammatical constructions that indicate hypothetical speaking and you didn't use any of them.
> OP, why do you think a farm business (which gmaps are showing the location of) should be in the same place where farm land is? These simply seem to be the addresses where a "farm business" is registered, as can be confirmed on a company-info-aggregator site [1]... To answer your point about why these seem different (e.g. you cannot report them), I think it's because they are automatically scraped by google from the official company-info sites in each country. Seems to be a similar situation in other countries, as far as I can tell. [1] this is the info of the first item on gmaps I get - address matches the location I'm shown https://youcontrol.com.ua/catalog/company_details/21897611/
> P.S. Those marks still look weird nevertheless. Not reportable or edible. The only article they link to is useless. Maybe it's worth fixing.
“In ukraine”? Russian troops might be located there, also VPNs, and non-GPS geolocation is not exactly reliable (at least in my european experience where I’m essentially never geolocalised correctly and the subsequent localisation is always incorrect, any location within a few hundred miles of a border is a crapshoot).
“Out of ukraine or russia” would be trivially bypassed via a vpn as well.
Spotters might very well use Google map to get coordinates but to communicate that via Google Maps itself would be strange. I don't see how fire control would not want to know what they are marking for prioritisation.
You waste energy and time.
There is an insane amount of paranoia in Ukraine (for good reasons ...) and it would not suprise me if the blue-on-blue events are a bigger problem than civilian sabouteurs themselves.
https://twitter.com/sbreakintl/status/1498619303717142529?t=...
Start talking about hold-ups at cross-roads that are clear. Tell them about shortcuts that actually lead through marshes. Tell them "the attack we discussed earlier will actually happen 43 minutes earlier". Tell them, "hey we have run out of food here". Tell them, I heard that 10 miles back they are serving hot food, damn I wish I was there.
Just fuck with their comms, making them either make wrong decisions, demoralize them, or make them abandon these comms for something even worse.
But I would have hoped that this was kept a secret and that I didn't knew about this.
This is a classic confusion of authentication and encryption. We can hear what they're saying (which is useful), but that doesn't mean we can pretend to be them.
I doubt they have robust enough authentication to determine whether you really are supposed to be speaking. Likely they won't believe you, but they will also start doubting, in general, messages sent over the channel. That means being less sure the actual authentic messages are to be believed.
It's more about disrupting their faith in the comm system, rather than about having them believe your falsehoods.
can we corroborate this with chinese and/or non-western media? it’s hard for me to believe anything at all during a war.
Also, Chinese media don't show any images of war as far as I know (just reading Global Times from time to time to have an opinion from 'the other side')
For people with Ukrainian and/or Russian language the raw sources like Telegram work nice. I initially used the sources very actively to cross-reference Ukrainian TV, and it was checking fine for me, so i mostly settled on the Ukrainian TV. Russian TV is even not in the ballpark of the truth, it is even not on the same planet.
how do you know this?
> so i mostly settled on the Ukrainian TV
these the same guys that said the ghost of kiev is a real thing (it’s not)? or that the soldiers of snake island died (they didn’t)?
I think it is fair to hold media to high standards, but shouldn't we cut them just a little slack if their country is literally being invaded right now?
For the record, I personally know I can trust that last part because I have friends and relatives living in the east of Ukraine (none of whom are particularly politically biased either way, they have kids and want the attacks to end). I cannot report any wild rampage and killing of innocent civilians, but I can definitely confirm the invasion, the soldiers and military equipment, the inability to leave the city, blown up bridges and train tracks, people hiding in basements for days, explosions, etc.
After your comment I checked Wikipedia sources and it turns out they did report something along those lines[0]. But again, cut them some slack.
[0] https://web.archive.org/web/20220225021042/https://www.pravd...
For contrast, to illustrate what disinformation is - Russian TV continue to claim non-attacking of civilians while you can easily find huge number of videos (which you can easily cross-check/geolocate/etc.) of civilian targets being attacked.
I think it’s entirely reasonable to hold journalists to some standards that include “not making shit up and then reporting on it”.
I can be (and am) simultaneously sympathetic to their side but not to their journalistic actions in this case.
But please don't suggest lack of Chinese sources is a relevant data point.
1) best intention from the media to be unbiased
2) minimum level of intelligence to spot bias and question the motivation by the reader
3) trust from the reader in the media that they're not willfully misled
4) trust from the media to the reader that they put things into the correct context within their own belief system
even one has (hypothetically) all of those, the audience will still be bitten by not sharing the same historic data and personal experience to put things into identical context as was available to when the info was produced. then there is the time-lag from when it gets written/published/read that distorts.
I do not know why you think it would be worth listening to anything they claim.
Japan's media doesn't seem to have a very different perspective:
https://www.asahi.com/ajw/
South Africa; similar stories and conclusions as most of the world:
https://www.netwerk24.com/beeld/aktueel
This Lebanese newspaper has an interesting take on how the Western media coverage is using double standards (perhaps a valid point), but nowhere do they dispute the current event:
https://lebanonews.net/En/2022/02/27/double-standards-wester...
Taiwan then?
https://www.taipeitimes.com/News/front/archives/2022/03/02/2...
thanks for the links.
https://www.scmp.com/news/china/diplomacy/article/3168998/ho...
https://www.scmp.com/news/china/article/3169021/china-told-u...
edit: toned down the rantiness & add sources:
https://twitter.com/mil_in_ua/status/1497961913292001283
https://twitter.com/sbreakintl/status/1498619303717142529
Arsalov arrested: https://warsawinstitute.org/deputy-chief-russias-general-sta...
It seems likely that corruption has left them with a non-working system. It happens often enough even in Western procurement.
apparently some of Russian forces are using unencrypted civilian analog radio
I requested more info, but she is likely sleeping.
Checking the points I get on gmaps (following your instructions) and then googling these farms, they seem to be real businesses, and the address matches what gmaps give me. First point I get can be checked on [1].
[1] https://youcontrol-com-ua.translate.goog/catalog/company_det...
If chances of this true are 10% and this is indeed true, giving it some attention is worth it.
Edit: by attention I mean somebody from Google who can check things up
For such a thing they probably have to get approval from the state department or someone else correct?
Google doesn't have to get approval from the state department to discontinue services.
I mean, if anything, you can imagine the situation where say CIA was doing some operation in a country, and at the same time there was some sort of mass disinformation campaign by some "enemy" actor, and Google decided to discontinue services, but that interfered with the CIA's operation somehow, maybe by cutting CIA off from intelligence and capability against the actor. So you imagine that it would be desirable there would be some co-ordination of things, to avoid stepping on toes. I mean, right? That's reasonable, isn't it?
turns out many people just blindly followed.
So closing/blacklisting accounts might not be the best solution, you could just make all the route instructions take them back to Russia.
https://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=30516996
I don't know if these considerations are relevant but would urge OP to contact someone in Ukraine about it.
Start placing 10, or a hundred times as many of these signs around non-important objects. Drown the signal in noise.
Some consideration is needed for how to keep these symbols believable, without accidentally marking certain people for being bombed. Still, I think if you have marked 60% of roofs in a town with these signs, then some-one will realize something is wrong.
Generalising the search for `*=фермерське` does not yield much more (around Kyiv, for example): https://overpass-turbo.eu/s/1gBA
You can pan and zoom the map and repeat the search with the 'Run' button on the top left, but I often get a time-out when searching for regions spanning more than ~50 km.
[1]: https://wiki.openstreetmap.org/wiki/Overpass_turbo
>> “The tags in Google Maps were created on Feb 28th, and people noticed that the tags match the places the missile strikes today,”