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Ride Sharing Service Grab is Messing up the World's Largest Mapping Community's Data in Southeast Asia (techcrunch.com)

Remote teams incorrectly overwrote data developed by volunteer mappers in Thailand. TechCrunch reports: Grab, Southeast Asia's top ride-hailing company, has hit a roadblock in its efforts to improve its mapping and routing service after running into trouble with OpenStreetMap, the world's largest collaborative mapping community, through a series of blundering edits in Thailand. Grab, which gobbled up Uber's local business in exchange for an equity swap earlier this year, has busily added details and upgraded the maps it uses across its eight markets in Southeast Asia. Accurate maps are, of course, essential to a smooth ride-hailing experience for Grab's 125 million registered users. Without accurate location details, ensuring that drivers and passengers can easily rendezvous becomes nearly impossible.

Grab's effort to improve the never-ending quest of more accurate maps involves a multi-input approach that uses Google Maps as the base with Grab adding in its own information -- "points of interest" cultivated through customer feedback and groundwork -- and other public or licensed information. However, what appears to be a focus on speed has seen it suspend all activities in Thailand -- Southeast Asia's second-largest economy -- after it was found to have overwritten data developed by OpenStreetMap (OSM) with inaccurate edits that were created by a remote team based in India. Established in 2006, OSM's mission is to "make the best map data set of the world" and it makes its data, which is developed by more than two million volunteers from across the world, available for use without charge.

An India-based team from GlobalLogic, an outsourced software firm contracted by Grab, made dozens of edits in recent months that overwrote information created by OSM members, who voluntarily map streets by visiting them in person. Grab suspended work in Thailand by the GlobalLogic team after OSM members complained about numerous incorrect edits in OSM forum posts. Unlike the hobbyist mappers who collect data in person, the Grab contractors used satellite imagery to "correct" local map details in Thailand which, in fast-changing cities like Bangkok, meant that their work was incorrect because it relied on out-of-date sources.

2 of 47 comments (clear)

  1. Shake off ethnic bias by tepples · · Score: 4, Informative

    Indochimps gonna Indochimp

    And the bigots gonna big, big, big, big, big
    Baby I'm just gonna shake, shake, shake, shake, shake
    Shake it off, shake it off

    So here's my brief summary for this story:

    1. Grab hires GlobalLogic to improve OpenStreetMap's data set in several countries
    2. GlobalLogic relies on outdated satellite imagery and ends up royally messing up OSM's map of Thailand
    3. OSM regulars discover the damage
    4. Grab tells GlobalLogic to take a break from mapping Thailand while starting conversation with OSM regulars in Thailand to figure out the right way to proceed

  2. Re:Colossal Adventure :) by bd580slashdot · · Score: 3, Informative

    No, no. You are in a maze of little twisty passages, all alike ...