A tourist in Venice blames Google Maps after falling into a canal

A tourist in Venice blames Google Maps after falling into a canal

He took her on a “trip” to the “waterfalls.”

Just in case we’re not overly reliant on Google Maps: A Polish tourist fell into a canal in Venice, Italy after the ubiquitous navigation app led her astray. For every Instagram video that goes viral.

“When Google Maps says ‘go straight’ but you’re in Venice,” Victoria Jozenda captioned the epic “Waterfall” clip.

The accompanying clip shows the traveler walking down the stairs in the city of canals while talking on her phone, and suddenly she slips and falls into the water like a slapstick comedy.


since-google-maps-arrived-scene-113383788 A tourist in Venice blames Google Maps after falling into a canal
Victoria Josenda treats her injuries after a fall. Instagram / @wika.we.wroclawiu

It then transitions to Guzenda dealing with some nasty scrapes on her leg that she sustained during an unintentional “channel surfing” moment.

Several viewers mocked the backpacker’s predicament, with one writing: “Oh my god what did she think would happen as she walked down the stone steps into the water.”

Another quipped: “Maybe stop blindly following the GPS and look around and use your brain.”

“I just got into this,” a third quipped.


since-google-maps-arrived-scene-113383792_67f8b2 A tourist in Venice blames Google Maps after falling into a canal
“Oh my God, what did she think was going to happen as she walked down the stone steps into the water,” one critic quipped. Instagram / @wika.we.wroclawiu

Others doubted it was a Google Maps issue at all. “She obviously slipped, she was probably going to stop there to take a picture lolololol,” one commenter postulated.

However, as many trolls have noted, Instagram pages are full of stories of people who have spilled into the Italian mecca’s labyrinthine waterways.

Meanwhile, Venice tourist sites note that Google Maps is unreliable in the floating city for several reasons.

For example, Venice does not use traditional street addresses like other cities, but instead uses a complex system called sestieri (Zones) “With sequential numbering that can move from one building to another unpredictably.” Venice tour leader points out.

They also attributed the difficulty to undetectable dead-end roads that are simply blocked by water, the unrecognizability of the application due to the impassability of some bridges, and narrow lanes that are treated like regular streets.

The app also doesn’t take ever-changing water levels into account, which could make some routes temporarily unusable.

“Google Maps often directs tourists to routes that don’t exist or are blocked by canals,” Tour Leader Venice wrote. “Many visitors find themselves standing on the edge of a canal without a bridge, which is exactly where Google Maps said they should be heading.”

There are even entire threads on Facebook where tourists ask about An odyssey-like experience To get around Venice using GPS.

That’s why many travel sites recommend people replace Google Maps with real tour guides, paper maps, or Venice navigation apps.

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