Google To Reopen Maps To User Edits, With an Anti-Abuse Plan
jfruh writes: When Google opened up its Maps to user edits, a lot of useful information got added — along with plenty of spam and outright abuse, some of it obscene, which led to the program being shut down. Now the company is planning to reopen things to user input, recruiting local mappers that they're calling "regional leads" to filter out problematic content.
Don't care about user edits.
Bring back the old interface.
The new interface gets in the way of so much. The "Classic Google Maps" was a well designed interface that worked really really well. Except for one thing: when you clicked to search on something it didn't automatically give you a search result for a place on the map that you could see. I'm sure that didn't help Google make money as much as the new one does.
The "New Google Maps feedback" has obviously been ignored because Google have not responded to any of the issues that they listed but users continue to ask for it. I wonder why?
A tip for how to go to your mapping website of choice:
1) Start with www.google.com
2) Enter into the search bar "bing maps" or "mapquest"
3) Click on the link to go to Bing Maps or Mapquest
There are some new footpaths in my area that I haven't been able to add, and it's been driving me nuts!
In Soviet Russia, dot slashes YOU!
Personally I have been lobbying my city council to put in a park/greenspace shaped like this.
Silence is a state of mime.
Compared to OpenStreetMap.org the Google Maps GUI to include elements and areas was falling behind. Did anybody knows if the GUi was improved on the last months?
...just hire people in each region to enter map data? This is a company that makes 50 billion in revenue. I just don't get how they can be so stingy with collecting data for their mapping service so they can spy on me. It's the same with Apple. How can they release a mapping platform and not even bother to hire someone in London to check that all the stations on the Northern line were there.
>> Reddit, but with maps
My first thought was "Wikipedia, with maps" (Shudder)
We already do that by being their product.
Don't fight for your country, if your country does not fight for you.
They already have that, it's called Wikimapia.
Like Wikipedia, it has a lot of useful crowd-sourced information that you might not get from a map produced by a central authority, but also like Wikipedia, it also has its fair share of vandalism and misinformation.
Why would someone contribute to copyrighted Google Maps for free, and let a company claim copyright over all of their contributions, and make money on it - as opposed to the open licensed OpenStreetMap, which anyone can use freely?
- Chuq