Mexican President Claudia Sheinbaum introduced Friday that her authorities is suing Google for relabeling the Gulf of Mexico as “Gulf of America” for US customers, CBS Information studies. The corporate had completed so in Google Maps after President Trump ordered the identify change at first of his Presidential time period.
The lawsuit makes good on Sheinbaum’s February menace that Mexico would “proceed to courtroom” if the corporate didn’t change the identify, which it stored as Gulf of Mexico for customers in Mexico, however switched to “Gulf of Mexico (Gulf of America)” in areas outdoors of the 2 international locations. Based on a machine-translated transcript of Sheinbaum’s Friday press briefing, she says “the one factor we wish is compliance with the decree issued by the US authorities,” which, she provides, “wouldn’t have the authority to call all the Gulf, as a result of that’s a global attribution.”
President Sheinbaum continues:
We couldn’t say something about altering the identify of a state, a mountain, or a lake. So, the a part of their territory that corresponds to them could be known as no matter they resolve. The half that corresponds to Mexico can’t be renamed. The half that corresponds to Cuba can’t be renamed, both. So, what we’re saying is, “Google, persist with what the US authorities authorised.”
Previous to her briefing, Mexico despatched letters to Google asking it to not label its territorial waters as Gulf of America, and Sheinbaum shared a reply from Google VP of presidency affairs and public coverage Cris Turner stating the corporate had no plans to alter its coverage. CBS Information notes that the US Home handed a invoice on Thursday that might codify the identify change.
Google didn’t instantly reply to The Verge’s request for remark.