Microsoft's Bing search engine appears to be censoring image results for "tank man"—a reference to the lone protester who stood in front of Chinese tanks—on the 32nd anniversary of the Tiananmen Square Massacre vice.com/en/article/qj8…
Meanwhile, a search for "tank man" on Google images displays what you would expect. Both the search on Google and Bing were made from the US, not China.
To be clear, searching "tank man" on either Google or Bing does return the relevant web results.
It's the image results on Bing that don't return any results. This could be a simple glitch at the end of the day. I reached out to Microsoft to ask.
Image search results from DuckDuckGo as well. Again, this could be something other than purposeful censorship. Also reached out to DuckDuckgo.
I tried a much more specific image search on Bing: "Tiananmen Square Massacre Tank Man."
These were the results.
What's interesting is Bing offers you other image search suggestions. This suggestion (left) literally shows the iconic "tank man" photo.
But when you actually click it, none of the results show that photo.
A Microsoft spokesperson tells me that "accidental human error" is to blame for missing images of "tank man" on its Bing search results.
"We are actively working to resolve this."
The incident comes on the 32nd anniversary of the Tiananmen Square Massacre.
Search engine @DuckDuckGo tells me in a statement that it relies on Bing for image search results and therefore was also affected by the “tank man” issue.
The company added that it does “not have any active presence” in China due to being blocked by the country’s government.
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NEW: The federal No Fly List was exposed on an open server discovered by a security researcher last week.
The list, which was being stored by the US airline CommuteAir, contained over 1.5 million rows of data including names, aliases, & birth dates. dailydot.com/debug/no-fly-l…
The server, discovered by hacker @_nyancrimew, was secured prior to publication.
CommuteAir says the list was a version from 2019.
The Daily Dot was able to find numerous high-profile figures including the recently-freed Russian arms dealer Viktor Bout & at least 16 aliases.
The infrastructure, described by CommuteAir as a development server, also contained the names, addresses, phone numbers & passport numbers of over 900 CommuteAir staff including pilots & crew.
CommuteAir says an initial investigation shows that no customer data was exposed.
After banning @elonjet, which he said he wouldn’t, Musk has now banned @joinmastodon after it tweeted that users could follow the jet-tracking account on their platform.
It appears Washington Post journalist @drewharwell was suspended as well for pointing out that Mastodon was suspended for promoting ElonJet, which I also just did in the above tweet.
New York Times journalist Ryan Mac has now been suspended for merely mentioning Musk’s suspension of Mastodon and ElonJet.
A blog run by David Depape, the Berkley man accused of attacking Paul Pelosi with a hammer, has articles titled 'Hitler did nothing wrong,' 'Black pilled,' and 'Pedophile normalization.'
A fake statement from Donald Trump congratulating Elon Musk on his acquisition of Twitter is spreading online.
The fabricated quote claims Trump's account will be reinstated Monday & that the ex-president is "Happy to be able to engage with an African-American owned business." twitter.com/i/web/status/1…
It appears the Independent briefly ran with the false claim but has since changed the article's headline.
The incorrect article has already been aggregated by Yahoo News.
NEW: Despite the significant uptick of hacking & leaking amid Russia's invasion of Ukraine, every single method offered by WikiLeaks to submit them documents is broken.
Every submission option featured by WikiLeaks leads to broken sites & errors.