Forbes reported, external on Thursday that the company had “tacitly admitted” to removing reviews criticising the Gulf location’s renaming on Maps.
The BBC has asked Google to confirm whether it has deleted them.
It comes after Google said in a blog post, external on Monday that US users would see “Gulf of America” replace Gulf of Mexico on Maps.
It said this followed a “longstanding policy” of reflecting name changes updated in official US government sources.
The name would remain unchanged in Mexico and the rest of the world would see “Gulf of America” added next to its current name in brackets, Google added.
Mexico’s President Claudia Sheinbaum wrote a letter to the company asking them not to rename the Gulf in a letter in late January.
President Sheinbaum reportedly, external reiterated her concerns on Thursday – suggesting the country could sue Google over the name change.
Meanwhile, Apple has also changed the name for US users of its own Maps app.
Star Trek actor George Takei has encouraged people to “report” the renamed location on Apple Maps in a post to his 1.1m followers on BlueSky.
“Please continue to report,” he wrote, external above a screenshot of a viral post on X (formerly Twitter) of someone appearing to report the renamed location.
The White House highlighted Apple Maps displaying “Gulf of America” instead of Gulf of Mexico in a X post on Wednesday, external.
Big tech firms and their chief executives have been accused of trying to “curry favour” with the Trump administration through controversial policy changes.
Meta announced it would ditch US fact-checkers and some global content policies in January, and later joined a slew of firms including Google and Amazon in scaling back diversity recruitment goals.