A glitch in
And this was not the only faux pas, it seems Google picked pictures of current position holders for searches about ‘india first finance minister’ and ‘india first defence minister’ as well. Ironically,
As expected,
Divya Spandana the Head of Social Media and Digital Communications of the Indian National Congress was predictably miffed at this error and tweeted:
.@Google @GoogleIndia what algorithm of yours allows this?! You’re so full of junk- pic.twitter.com/GHyxh3fEWm
— Divya Spandana/Ramya (@divyaspandana) April 25, 2018 ]]>In response, Twitter user Abhinav Agarwal was kind enough to the share the reason behind the glitch with this tweet:
Sigh..
1. Google is serving up a Wikipedia page on the topic, "List of Prime Ministers of India - Wikipedia"
2. The first image on the Wikipedia page is of Narendra Modi, PM.
3. When displayed on a narrow screen, the image comes up first.
Can the lady NOT understand this? https://t.co/wuQqMCbWx4
But Twitterati, both famous and not so famous, decided to cash in and what followed was a barrage of tweets expressing anger, annoyance and of course amusement.
Sanjiv Bhatt, the Former Indian Police Service officer known for his role in filing an affidavit in the Supreme Court of India against Narendra Modi shared the following tweet:
Type “India First PM” in Google Search and see the result!🤔
— Sanjiv Bhatt (IPS) (@sanjivbhatt) April 25, 2018 ]]>Then came a tweet by Salil Tripathi, contributing editor at Mint and at Caravan Magazine:
Mitron, who was India's first PM? pic.twitter.com/K8IQXgusx3
— Salil Tripathi (@saliltripathi) April 25, 2018 ]]>And then there was the inevitable veiled attack at the government:
Type 'India first pm' in google and result is Mr.Narendra Modi's photo instead of Pt. Jawaharlal Nehru. @Google Pls correct it.. How come you also fell in the trap of Mr.Modi? pic.twitter.com/H8zlP9zzW0
— Ashok Tanwar (@AshokTanwar_INC) April 25, 2018 ]]>Oops
Is this Google error?
Has Nehru been generous to Modi let him use name and title of First PM?
Has BJP playing a prank? @AskAnshul @India_Policy @ShefVaidya @malviyamit @sambitswaraj @swamy39 @dr_satyapal @rsprasad @tavleen_singh @bhupendrachaube @Shehzad_Ind @dpradhanbjp pic.twitter.com/zzEPod9zFi
Dear @Google you had one job! pic.twitter.com/WFxYpNVrCf
— Irony Of India (@IronyOfIndia_) April 25, 2018 ]]>Google, of course, has corrected the issue, getting rid of the image altogether. It just shows a plain Wikipedia page for Jawaharlal Nehru now.