
The South Korean tourist went to India and found “ugly, foggy photos” of the country. So provided that a high level of pollution has brought many facial masks.
He searched the keyword “Indo” because it is what people in South Korea call it. Google search results must be geologically specific, because when we searched Google with the same keyword, we did not find any such photos.
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“There are too many misinformation about India on the Internet,” he wrote a social media user and shared a video of revelation.
“The same with YouTube, searching for Indian food and everything you get is Slum Street Food Clips. These CEOs don’t give damn damn,” one user said.
“Western societies earn money by humiliating India everywhere,” he came from another.
Another wrote: “Indian PR needs upgrade.”
“What does our Minister of Tourism and Minister of Information do?” He asked one user.
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“Will the Indian embassy in South Korea not notice? responded to one social media user.
Another replied, “What does he have in common with Google pictures?”
One user wrote: “To assess India based on foggy images on Google is like judging a book by its envelope. If you really want to understand India, don’t just look through your eyes, I feel it with my heart.”
According to another user, such a misinformation exists “because many Indians of the garbage and threshing their country”.
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However, several users from abroad claim that the information is correct.
“Disinformation? Goddamns, you guys literally swim in your f ** ing Pi **,” the user apparently commented from Uzbekistan.
“If Google India, see garbage, barbaric people and pollution. If you go to India, 9 out of 10 of your experience will be garbage, barbarian people and pollution,” came another answer from a foreigner.
But one Indian user raises another problem: “If India was as big, why does every Indian want to leave the country?”
“He finds that it is not just the negative in the air, but also sh*t on the ground,” he commented.
Another user referred to the pollution of Delhi: “I think that when visiting foreign countries, Indian capital like most tourists.”
Misinformation in India
However, misinformation about India is not only an external problem, but also an internal threat.
According to a global risk report, India has been included in the highest risk country for misinformation and false reports. Joyojeet Pal, a professor who studies how technology affects democracy in India, says false news is spreading because it is cleverly produced, easy to believe and quickly goes viral.
In India, people are deeply divided and many are ready to believe negative news about groups they don’t like. Political parties use social media strongly and trained teams to make the content of viral.
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