Post Tribune (Sunday)

Microsoft says blocking of ‘tank man’ was error

- By Zen Soo and Frank Bajak

HONG KONG — Microsoft Corp. blamed “accidental human error” for its Bing search engine briefly not showing image results for the search term “tank man” on the anniversar­y of the bloody military crackdown in Beijing’s Tiananmen Square in 1989.

Users in different parts of the world, including the U.S., said Friday that no image results were returned when they searched for the term “tank man.”

“Tank man” refers to the iconic image of a standoff between an unidentifi­ed civilian and a line of military tanks leaving Beijing’s Tiananmen Square after a brutal crackdown on pro-democracy protesters. The photo has become a symbol of defiance around the world.

After being alerted by reporters, Microsoft said in a statement that the issue was “due to an accidental human error and has been resolved.” Hours later, images of “tank man” photograph­s were returned by the search engine.

The company did not elaborate on what the human error was or how it had happened. Nor did it say how much of its Bing developmen­t team is Chinabased. The company’s largest research and developmen­t center outside the United States is in China, and it posted a job in January for a China-based senior software engineer to lead a team that develops the technology powering Bing image search.

Chines e authoritie­s require search engines, websites and social media platforms operating within the country to censor keywords and results deemed politicall­y sensitive or critical of the Chinese government. References to the Tiananmen Square crackdown in 1989 are blocked in China, as are images relating to the event.

 ?? JEFF WIDENER/AP ?? This 1989 photo of a man blocking tanks in Tiananmen Square was briefly unavailabl­e on Bing.
JEFF WIDENER/AP This 1989 photo of a man blocking tanks in Tiananmen Square was briefly unavailabl­e on Bing.

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