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Vista da rua de Google - uma invasão de privacidade?

Sexta-feira, março 20o, 2009

TEM revolutionised já a maneira que nós procuraramos pela informação, encontramos imagens ou rotas da planta, mas Google tem ido agora todo o irmão grande em nós, com o lançamento ontem da vista no Reino Unido, um serviço da rua de Google que permitisse que você v imagens de 360 graus da estrada fora de todo o endereço em virtualmente qualquer rua em uma de 25 cidades, including Glasgow, Edimburgo, Dundee e Aberdeen.
Esta é terra de Google, mas no nível da rua, com cada butt do fag, rejeitou o kebab e o pool do vómito na mostra ao mundo, as well as algumas coisas mais menos savoury. Como este serviço será de muito real
o uso é notimmediately aparente quando você logon, mas é certamente divertimento rather bom.

Disponível em nove países worldwide, o serviço em linha foi lançado primeiramente para os E.U. em 2007. Você pode datilografar um endereço ou um postcode em mapas de Google e encontrar uma fotografia de estática dela, ou você pode arrastar um ícone alaranjado wobbly pequeno chamado `Pegman' (olha como um Peg da roupa) através do mapa e deixá-lo cair onde quer que você gosta (contanto que a rua é azul destacado).

Uma imagem da área estalará acima e você pode então usar setas girá-la. Se você se estiver usando Google traça para planear uma viagem, sua rota será acompanhado por imagens móveis para assegurá-lo não começa perdido.

Como a maioria de vista first-time Googlers da rua, eu procuraro inicialmente pelo meu próprio liso, girando sobre um eixo a vista para ver os regulars fora da publicação através da estrada que aprecíam um fag sly. Estas posições innocuous provam mais divertimento do que marcos recognisable de uma cidade - quais puderam também ser postcards virtuais - embora as ruas ocupadas tais como a estrada de Byres em Glasgow ou a milha real em Edimburgo provem o divertimento para pessoa-prestar atenção virtual (é que um argumento nós mancha o restaurante Indian de Rawalpindi exterior na rua de Sauchiehall?)

O elemento voyeuristic prova um dos usos entertaining da vista da rua. Eu procuraro todos meus haunts para tentar manchar meu self virtual, e casas dos amigos', encontrando que eu lata apenas sobre v na janela de um quarto vivo do conhecimento.

Este aspecto, naturalmente, levanta o interesse muito real sobre a ruptura da privacidade. O ano passado, Google foi investigado por Escritório da informação do comissário sobre as plantas, mas dado eventualmente o go-ahead para o projeto. Street View uses special technology to blur registration plates and faces (resulting in some cases in the blurring of the faces of statues or horses) and users can flag up images for removal by clicking on a ‘Report a concern’ link.

Google argues that the level of detail shown is the same as that you would see driving down a road (hence the reason 10 Downing Street is not visible).

While critics argue that the service could be used to plan crimes, Google UK’s new head, Matt Brittin, said that in discussions with the Metropolitan police, they found that the service helps to track and monitor crime. Indeed, on one occasion police in the US used Street View to find the location of a kidnapped child.

However, some campaigners claim that it violates our right to privacy. “These images are being captured without people’s permission for commercial use and we believe that it is not legally acceptable,” Simon Davies of Privacy International told a reporter yesterday. “They are also putting into place a system for updating these images in the future, and for storing the images digitally where they could be misused.”

So could a man put his home address into Street View only to spot his wife greeting the milkman in a rather-too-friendly manner? Could a boss search for their place of work and catch their employees at the back door having a sneaky cigarette? Certainly, Street View has inadvertantly caught people red-handed (albeit retrospectively) on more than one occasion.

The tens of millions of pictures were obtained last summer, when a fleet of Google cars nipped across the nation capturing images – which were later stitched together – on special 360-degree cameras that were mounted on their roofs. Difficult weather conditions held up the process in many cases: dry, overcast days proved most effective for getting clear pictures, but last summer those were few and far between.

So for what will we use Street View? Google suggests you might employ it to preview your holiday accommodation, show friends abroad where you live, check out local amenities if you’re moving to a new area, or check out the level of wheelchair access a building or area has before you visit.

“Street View has been hugely popular with our users in Europe and worldwide; we’re thrilled it’s now available in the UK for so many great cities,” says Google’s geospatial technologist, Ed Parsons. “Google Maps and Google Earth have long been popular with British people and are used by governments, businesses and individuals as essential and informative tools every day of the week – (this] now adds a new dimension.”

Street View has also teamed up with other organisations, including FindaProperty.com, which allows users to look at the local area before they view a property to rent or buy (a service that would certainly have saved me some time last year, when I wrote off a potential flat upon finding it was located opposite a suspicious-looking sauna) and Tate, who will offer art lovers links to locations that have inspired paintings in their galleries.

All practical uses certainly, but Street View is also – quite simply – an addictive resource. Once you get the hang of it, you can zip around a city, exploring less familiar areas from the comfort of your desk and getting excited when you spot all your favourite places. (Some are more interesting than others of course – there’s something rather sinister about sitting indoors on a sunny day, taking a virtual tour of the A199 in East Lothian.)

In countries where the service has been established for a while, spotting weird and wacky things on Street View has evolved into something of a sport.

From nudity to thieves escaping through windows and even a man dressed as a beehive, entire websites are now devoted to bizarre Street View sightings.

So with the service now up and running in Scotland, what strange Street View spots might we clock up? A Morningside Lady shoplifting a cream scone, perhaps? Naked sunbathing in Kelvingrove Park? Fred Goodwin nipping out to collect his pension? Log on to maps.google.co.uk to find out.

MILES BETTER

• ORGANISERS said that London was the most difficult place to drive for Street View because of its many one-way streets and high buildings, and a lack of parking areas.

• SOME areas are yet to be visible on Street View, owing to road works taking place when Google was in town. Edinburgh’s Princes Street and George Street, for example, aren’t yet available to view.

• THE Google team covered 22,369 miles across 25 cities in the UK to launch the service in Britain.

• ONE imaginative Google employee used Street View to propose to his girlfriend.

• STREET View provides 360° horizontal and 290° vertical panoramic street-level views.

• FOR pedestrian areas and narrow streets that cannot be accessed by car, Google Bikes are used instead.

• THE ultimate aim, Google claims, is to eventually provide street views of the whole world.

• IN order to protect their privacy, before the service was launched, Google removed photos of domestic-violence shelters.

• THE Pentagon, right, has banned Google from publishing Street View content of US military bases.

• A US couple sued Google unsuccessfully for invasion of privacy, stating that because their home was visible on Street View, its value was diminished because it had been chosen for its privacy.


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This entry was posted on Friday, March 20th, 2009 at 5:35 pm and is filed under Science & Technology News . You can follow any responses to this entry through the RSS 2.0 feed. You can leave a response, or trackback from your own site.
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