Coordinates on the feed! Thai page unfolds Cambodian armed procession - Khmer netizens
🌏 Coordinates on the feed! Thai page unfolds Cambodian armed procession - Khmer netizens frightened. Mud IP warns each other. Risk, war information in the social age.
Column: By aekdon
November 4, 2025 - The famous Facebook page, the Coordinated Photo Survey Line "Thai Burma railway," post analyzing the position of a Cambodian military convoy carrying multiple-caliber rockets and artillery, after demobilization from the border area, the Royal Temple, and the Royal Temple, became an alert stream in Thailand and Cambodia.
The page indicates that the convoy has moved to Phnom Penh, pointing the reference point from the warehouses and commercial buildings seen in the clip, along with questioning the destination of the heavy weapons as to whether it will actually return to the division location; the analysis also indicates the time the clip was taken (early morning, Nov. 2) and the national flag characteristics on the vehicles corresponding to the moving route the previous night.
As a result of the public opening of coordinates, Cambodian netizens are alert - IPPs are taken in and shared warning posts among themselves in the Telegram and Facebook groups, some warning soldiers and citizens to be careful to post images of troop movements because the "opposite side" may be capturing positions. Some warning messages suggest that the disclosure of positions like this may make it easier for military movements to be targeted by spying or opposing operations.
Page administrators listed nicknames and historical-geographic-information-seeking work histories, with posts of clips and explaining the reasons why coordinates and maps are popularly used as tools, analytically noting that moving heavy weapons may in part be a move back to base, or a temporary move to a new podium near a major Cambodian city.
Thai Social Perspectives - Public Information vs. Strategic Risk
This event highlights the structural problems of the social age: visual-video data that anyone can publish or decode coordinates becomes a message weapon that can instantly ignite panic or change the behavior of those involved. Although some posts have a "want people to know" spirit, the results can easily reinforce tension or create instability.
Activism on the online world also reflects the sensitivity of society's information on both sides of the border - while Thais keep an eye on weapons positions for transparency and calm, Cambodians are reasonable to fear that such revelations could hurt national security or open up channels for conflict partners to benefit.
Proposal for Managing News in Sensitive Situations
Societies should raise the level of "vigilance" in the dissemination of animated images, military equipment and force, especially when that information may affect stability; referencing information from private pages should be followed by monitoring by official authorities; and security agencies themselves should have channels to clarify information quickly to reduce ambiguity and terror in society.
The obvious lesson is that in an age when "coordinates" are told in a single glance, journalists, media entrepreneurs and online citizens must realize that freedom of information is valuable, but responsibility for impact is something that must be matched. If there is a lack of balance, a single coordinate can bring unexpected results in both real war dimensions and information warfare.
The world today is clear that "map" and "one post" are more powerful than thought - if not used with caution, the coordinates on the feed page can change the course of politics and security in the blink of an eye.
https://news-wanmai.blogspot.com/2025/11/blog-post_59.html











































































