Google StreetView Is In Your Driveway 439
hermit_crab writes "Janet and George McKee are the neighbors of the Borings, who we discussed yesterday as the couple suing Google over StreetView. The McKees own a house that is featured in a much more intrusive set of Google StreetView images. 'The Google car continued past the steps leading to the McKees's front door and came to a stop outside the house's three-car garage (and next to the family's trampoline and portable basketball rim). Taking photos all the time, the Google vehicle was squarely on private property, a fact that presumably should have been apparent when the gravel path became paved.' Unlike the Borings, the McKees have not announced intentions to sue Google, nor have they requested to have the images removed."
Re:Gravel! Turn back! (Score:5, Interesting)
Re:Private means private. (Score:3, Interesting)
Re:How else should they turn around? (Score:3, Interesting)
When the vans turn around in ordinary driveways, or enter private communities who's roads are not included in GPS data, the cameras don't take pictures... If he parks in front of a starbucks and leaves the van running while his buddy refills their coffee, it takes 1 image, not dozens, since it's running in a computer and knows it has not moved...
Per the computer, that was not a driveway, so it snapped images. If he turned around in MY driveway, this would not have occurred since he would have been off the GPS indicated road.
Re:Private means private. (Score:3, Interesting)
Please, cite PA state law which provides for this.
2: tresspassing is not automatic. In most states even when properly posted, you can still go onto private land and go up to the front door. Even salesman can ring bells at homes posted no soliciting in SC. The onyl poewr you have is to ask them to leave. It only becomes tresspassing if they refuse to or if they return later. Neither of these conditions happened.
http://members.aol.com/StatutesPA/18.Cp.35.html [aol.com]
In PA, posting IS legally binding. If it's maked as no trepsasing, you CANNOT enter the property without permission.
3: the proerty itself was not marked, posted, fenced with a gate, not in any other way abvious that is was private. I can't see in any of the pictures the van took where their so called private road sign exists, let alone complies with their state's laws concerning use of proper singage (including regionally accepted or universal images to assist those who can't read).
Not in any of the pictures which we've seen. Unless you've actually been on that road, I would drop this argument.
4: all they had to do was ask for the images to be removed.
Google may not have had a right to be on the property; that has nothing to do with pictures being taken. Also, I prefer people get my permission to photograph me or my property in advance if they are going to use it in a commerical application.
5: the engineer in the vehicle has no control over the images being taken, not can he catalog or document them. This is ON PURPOSE to prevent tampering with the image feeds, and to keep the image recorder in sync with GPS information.
That's not an excuse to trepass or take pictures on private property without permission.
As an aside, I prefer trespass not even require posting; unless you KNOW you have permission to be on a piece of property, you shouldn't be on it. You shouldn't be able to root around my car anymore than you should be able to root around on my property.
Re:Intrusive??? (Score:4, Interesting)
It is certainly not the case that somebody's driveway is sacrosanct territory, especially if it is the only approach to the house. What do you do if you're a vacuum salesman? You walk up the driveway and ring the bell. And, by the way, this means you can see into their windows. It doesn't mean you can stand in the bushes and peer into their windows; in that case you are considered to have intruded into the home's "curtilage", which is a vaguely defined region around parts of the house which is treated as almost equivalent to the interior.
But the driveway is not curtilage, nor is the front walk. You certainly are entitled to the stray photons that enter your eye as you traverse the areas of the property that are not off limits.
The legal doctrines covering privacy are, in the US at least, utter rubbish. What's more, patching the obvious problems with those doctrines only make them more confusing and imponderable. There's too much emphasis on disclosure as the significant even in any privacy situation. What you are entitled to see or hear, you are entitled to share, unless you have some kind of special legal duty to the parties you see or overhear. You are also, with certain restrictions and stipulations, entitled to record things your are entitled to perceive, and then to publish them.
And that' what we've got here. Obviously, this is the kind of thing that shouldn't be allowed, although I don't think there should be huge damages paid out. But I wouldn't be surprised if Google doesn't win if this comes to court. The state of privacy law is such that it common sense has very predictive value for how a borderline situation like this is adjudicated. Of course common sense notions of privacy are utter rubbish too.
The problem is that we're too concerned with the mechanics of disclosure and secret keeping. We're not concerned enough with personal autonomy.
Suppose you are a collector of erotic art. Very tacky erotic art. You don't much care if the vacuum salesman heading up the walk catches a glimpse of the very prominent sculpture you have in your living room. Nor are you much concerned that he probably tells other salesmen about the crazy people who had a gold plated lingam eight feet high in their living room.
But you might care if a potential employer could find that out by doing a Google search on your address. It's an issue of autonomy; you don't want people in a position to exercise power over you making decisions based on information that is irrelevant or which they don't understand.
That's really the essential personal interest you have in your privacy, but it's not weighed at all in privacy law, except possibly as part of evaluating damages.
Re:Gravel! Turn back! (Score:5, Interesting)
Re:Gravel! Turn back! (Score:3, Interesting)
Also, I didn't see anywhere in the PA statutes that say it's ok to trespass if you're just turning your car around...
Re:Private means private. (Score:3, Interesting)
nothing gray about it (Score:3, Interesting)
Furthermore, property owners may not even be legally allowed to impose such restrictions; although these roads are privately owned, they are intended for unrestricted public access, which means that they may count as "public places" for the purpose of photography.
Re:Gravel! Turn back! (Score:3, Interesting)
Google paid them to go to a specific lat/long. That location happens to be pricate property. So, yes, yes they did.
Re:Gravel! Turn back! (Score:3, Interesting)
Re:Gravel! Turn back! (Score:3, Interesting)
Re:Gravel! Turn back! (Score:3, Interesting)
If they don't have procedures to care for the fact that their employess have been spending 7 hours staring at a slide show of strangers' houses, they damned well have no business taking those pictures.
If you can not deal with the necessary fallout of your business practises, change business.
As simple as that.