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Yup, you can change those things in Atlas. The "GroundTruth:Local" team did our best to accurately have 6 points of data: name, address, phone, url, business category, and pinpoint on the map. Atlas also had history for POIs, so you could see history from other operators. We wouldn't just use streetview, we'd also search for websites and, if we had to, call the business itself. The Local team used Atlas, as well as the GroundTruth road-placement team, and the QA teams. There were different map layers and controls you could bring up. Business category was funny because it had the most subjectivity to it. There was also a team in Hyderabad (that wouldn't make phone calls), and I once got into a dispute about whether "Olive Garden" is an American restaurant or an italian restaurant. :D Yup, so part of the Atlas history for a POI is seeing problems that people have submitted onto a listing. When I was doing this a few years ago we had a humongous backlog of user feedback, but I'm under the impression now that they're mostly up to date. Spammers were a huge problem. For businesses that don't want to advertise their brick-and-motor (a locksmith comes to you, not you to a locksmith) the policy was that they'd get one POI at the center of the city or zipcode they operated in. You'd think that locksmiths are bad, but florists are worse. Florists! They sell flowers to people! Horrible spammers. They also like to make fraudulent listings--- so they'll make a listing for "Competitor's Flowers" but have the phone number go to their business "Evil Flowers LLC". |
Regarding florists, they're bad, completely agree. I weeded out a few mega-spam networks a few years ago before I gave up and focused on locksmith spammers. Garage door suppliers, handymen, carpet cleaners, movers, escorts, and lawyers! Lawyers are pretty bad, especially the ambulance chasers/accident attorneys.