You can ask Facebook to make a change: load the page specified by you
and display it to you, and load another canonical version to store (so
they can do proper link count etc.)...
-Liangent
On Sun, Oct 16, 2011 at 12:30 PM, Liangent <liangent(a)gmail.com> wrote:
I guess it's because we have <link
rel="canonical"
href="http://zh.wikipedia.org/wiki/Gmail" /> in page source, so
Facebook is fetching the canonical (variant-neutral) version (and this
is expected, since
http://zh.wikipedia.org/zh-tw/Gmail and
http://zh.wikipedia.org/zh-cn/Gmail refer to the same article), where
zh is used as the interface language. However zh falls back to
zh-hans, so all interface messages are in zh-hans.
-Liangent
On Sun, Oct 16, 2011 at 10:49 AM, <jidanni(a)jidanni.org> wrote:
Gentlemen, no matter if in Google search results,
or Facebook link
previews, links that specifically have the zh-tw part in them
http://zh.wikipedia.org/zh-tw/ ...
still end up having simplified Chinese, despite no such simplified <title>
appearing in the entire page.
I suspect somehow the simplified Chinese version is considered Cache
Equivalent for <title> purposes ... but it is not and looks horrible to
me trying to present a fully Traditional appearing link.
Go ahead and test, share "http://zh.wikipedia.org/zh-tw/Gmail" via
Facebook, and notice the simplified Chinese there in the title of the
link created.
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