When I was a cartographer in the 1500s I used to hide dragons, sea serpents and the occasional heretical inscription in the blank bits, because at least back then the Holy Roman Emperor had the decency to pretend he didn’t notice as long as the tax broders were correct.<p>Now look at us: the Swiss federal cartographers, salaried, pensioned, triple-proofread, still cannot resist smuggling a naked woman and a cheeky marmot into the official topography. And the admisntration? They wait until the perpetrator has safely retired on full index-linked benefits, then solemnly announce the marmot will be "removed in the next revision cycle, pending environmental-impact assessment of the pixel."<p>This is what passes for rebellion inside the European regulatory state: a rodent drawn at 1:25 000 scale that offends precisely no one and will be erased by a civil servant who wasn’t even born when it was sketched. Truly the revolutionary spirit of our continent has been reduced to a change-request ticket with fourteen mandatory approvers and a carbon-copy to Bern.<p>I fill in another compliance form and weep for the age when men risked the stake for a badly drawn leviathan.
In case you didn’t recognize this as an epic comment, you should know this is an epic comment.
This was great - thank you, nicely done.
I love this kind of tongue-in-cheek steganography. In a similar vein: Vermont Inmates Hide Image Of Pig On Police Decals (<a href="https://www.npr.org/sections/thetwo-way/2012/02/03/146358114/vermont-inmates-hide-image-of-pig-on-police-decals" rel="nofollow">https://www.npr.org/sections/thetwo-way/2012/02/03/146358114...</a>)
> "'This is not as offensive as it would have been years ago. We can see the humor,' said Public Safety Commissioner Keith Flynn, a former state trooper and state prosecutor who was named commissioner a year ago. 'If the person had used some of that creativeness, he or she would not have ended up inside.'"<p>I read (and re-read, and re-read) the book <i>You Can't Win</i> on recommendation of a HN user. It's about a thief from the late 1800s-early 1900s, and the crimes he and his thief buddies did were pretty creative. A lot of crime is more brute-force than clever, but people can do some pretty interesting things if they want something and don't care if they lose everything.
> <i>You Can't Win</i><p>It's pretty entertaining!<p>And free to read for anyone interested: <a href="https://www.gutenberg.org/ebooks/69404" rel="nofollow">https://www.gutenberg.org/ebooks/69404</a>
Standard Ebooks does a nice job of typesetting and proofreading many of the Project Gutenberg books, including this one.<p><a href="https://standardebooks.org/ebooks/jack-black/you-cant-win" rel="nofollow">https://standardebooks.org/ebooks/jack-black/you-cant-win</a>
A hidden pig? I bet some younger cops covet the cars with this logo.<p>I was once at a military unit where someone hid a golf club in a crest for the door to the officers mess. It was spotted years later. The officers claimed to "never found out who did it", but they also never took it down.
I agree for the decal, but the map steganography is at the expense of accuracy. It's less than professional, like adding a small bug to a corner case of your code for a joke.
I only skimmed the pictures in the article but the ones I saw could have no plausible impact on navigation. They are buried within tiny details that are essentially artistic anyway, there is no impact on accuracy possible.
Not none, just very little, like the obscure code corner case. If you are thinking about building something nearby, or specifically looking for interesting terrain to visit, you may be misled. The pig shaped cow spot, on the other hand, adds accurate symbology to the decal, with a wholesome helping of self deprecation.<p>To allow de minimis excursions from ground truth is a necessary compromise, but purposely introducing them isn't.
I don't think the effect would be serious. I have plotted explorations of the wilderness off topo maps--and I always head out perfectly well knowing that the map isn't a sufficiently accurate representation of reality to actually trust it. The flatter the terrain on the map the more likely it will prove passable on the ground but features can be small enough to not show, yet make it impractical to get through.
Oh please.<p>Anyone looking to actually do something interesting with a piece of land is going to have to a much higher resolution map of the site, not use the extreme zoom and on a map covering a huge area.<p>Or they may even go rogue and visit the place! Heavens to Murgatroyd!
Trap streets and fake towns are far worse than the examples shown here.
For something like a glacier, whose face is changing constantly anyway, who could even say if it didn't look like a marmot for a while? That whole part of the map could just say "glacier face" and be cross-hatched since it's unknowable at the time of publication, but that's no fun.
I believe jokes inserted into code that dont impact user experience negatively are called easter eggs, not bugs
Applications have had easter eggs for ages.<p><a href="https://play.rust-lang.org/?version=stable&mode=debug&edition=2018&gist=0ab2bd6a9d722e0f05a95e2a5dcf89cc" rel="nofollow">https://play.rust-lang.org/?version=stable&mode=debug&editio...</a>
If you ever come to Switzerland download the swisstopo app. It is very detailed and useful for hiking but even in the city too, showing the locations of fountains, for example, rural and urban official and unofficial hiking trails, closed trails, slopes too steep to traverse, etc etc etc.<p>The Swiss topographical institute is a treasure.
This is where screenshots come from, official topo data are free. I use them all the time for hiking, ski touring etc. Good thing they cover also neighboring mountains a bit (to varying detail) so ie France or Italy can be enjoyed just with a single app.<p>Then you go further and realize how much worse free easy to find things are. There are variations of opentopomap but they lack the finesse of this.<p>Also available in various other layouts ie biking (veloland), canoeing or various winter sports (sadly no outright ski touring so I aproximate summer hiking paths, the best to use are still physical maps but then you need a hefty stash of various zooms at home, pricey too).<p>But none is perfect - opentopo map has some obscure artifacts, see ie here what I found by a chance - some hole too deep to be real, near Aletsch glacier or famous Eiger, a mountain slope in Bernese alps [1], while official Swiss topo looks like this without any such illogical artifact [2]<p>[1] <a href="https://opentopomap.org/#map=15/46.55901/8.07171" rel="nofollow">https://opentopomap.org/#map=15/46.55901/8.07171</a>
[2] <a href="https://schweizmobil.ch/en/map?season=summer&bgLayer=pk&layers=&detours=yes&photos=yes&logos=yes&shooting=yes&E=2648594&N=1156360&resolution=2.61" rel="nofollow">https://schweizmobil.ch/en/map?season=summer&bgLayer=pk&laye...</a>
Previously:<p><i>Cartographers Have Been Hiding Covert Illustrations Inside Swiss Official Maps</i> - <a href="https://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=22490017">https://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=22490017</a> - Mar 2020 (22 comment)<p><i>Cartographers Have Been Hiding Covert Illustrations Inside Swiss Official Maps</i> - <a href="https://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=22461602">https://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=22461602</a> - Mar 2020 (1 comment)<p><i>Cartographers Have Been Hiding Covert Illustrations Inside Swiss Official Maps</i> - <a href="https://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=22407413">https://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=22407413</a> - Feb 2020 (1 comment)
The marmot, hiker, and fish- alright. I buy it. The others... Feels a bit like finding shapes in the clouds.<p>But I'm no cartographer so maybe these are more obvious to people that have the skill.
The digital version over at <a href="https://map.geo.admin.ch/" rel="nofollow">https://map.geo.admin.ch/</a> has existed for many years but it is only a few years now that all Cantos have agreed to provide the data for free[1]. There is a lot of interesting data such as "Lärmbelastung" where you can lookup how loud car or rail traffic is at a location.<p>[1] <a href="https://www.geo.admin.ch/en/general-terms-of-use-fsdi" rel="nofollow">https://www.geo.admin.ch/en/general-terms-of-use-fsdi</a>
Reminds me of a message hidden in a NOAA weather forecast during a government shutdown<p><a href="https://www.cnn.com/2013/10/04/politics/weather-service-cryptic-message" rel="nofollow">https://www.cnn.com/2013/10/04/politics/weather-service-cryp...</a>
Seems like the hiker at the bottom of the article was introduced in 1997 and removed only in 2017: <a href="https://s.geo.admin.ch/be66brq5oby9" rel="nofollow">https://s.geo.admin.ch/be66brq5oby9</a>
A different kind of map, but 3d level (map) designers seem to enjoy doing Easter eggs and hidden things in levels. There are the famous Half-Life G-man cameos for example, which aren't quite fourth wall as it were, but still something not many know of.
As long as they keep their hidden illustrations away from my precious Swiss chocolate logos!
I haven't read the article, but aren't these introduced to detect illegal copies?
Speaking from experience, it's more often bored cartographers trying to inject some fun into mundane activities.<p>I used to try and write my initials.<p>Quite often it devolves into a game of seeing what you can get past the reviewers
Interesting perspective. As an OSM contributor, I've never had this thought. You presumably spend up to 8 hours a day mapping, all week long (depending on the week perhaps), which I can totally imagine gets old. I only map when I feel like it and not when I'm bored<p>And on OSM we don't have boss fights in the shape of reviewers. That does sound like a fun challenge :P
I would think that they are too recognizable for that. It would be better to subtly change one insignificant squiggle into another.
You probably mean this: <a href="https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Trap_street" rel="nofollow">https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Trap_street</a>
I recently read 'The Cartographers' by Peng Shepherd. If you like this article and want to read a fun murder mystery about things hidden in maps then that is definitely the book for you. (No relation to the author here, I just liked the book!)
Slightly annoying that the magnified parts are directly over their original location. This blocks the view to see them in their original size and context.
Appending a "for Kids" would turn them into immediate heroes.
The link is down. This is a snapshot from 2020<p><a href="https://web.archive.org/web/20200305164547/https://eyeondesign.aiga.org/for-decades-cartographers-have-been-hiding-covert-illustrations-inside-of-switzerlands-official-maps/" rel="nofollow">https://web.archive.org/web/20200305164547/https://eyeondesi...</a>
> illustrations hidden by the official cartographers at Swisstopo in defiance of their mandate “to reconstitute reality.”<p>This is such an odd idea.
Hic sunt illustrationes :)
Visual steganography.
Conspiracy theory article
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