Google's Street View Meets Resistance In France 201
Ian Lamont writes "Google has begun to scan the streets of Paris as part of its Street View service, but the company may be hindered from publishing them unedited. The reason? French privacy laws. Google may be forced to blur faces or use low-resolution versions of the photographs. The Embassy of France in the US has a page devoted to French privacy laws, that says the laws are needed to 'avoid infringing the individual's right to privacy and right to his or her picture (photograph or drawing), both of them rights of personality.'"
When in Rome... (Score:5, Insightful)
Re:When in Rome... (Score:5, Funny)
brain... hurt...
Re:When in Rome... (Score:5, Funny)
Re:When in Rome... (Score:5, Funny)
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Sure, they do. I just hope they push it as far as legally possible. The French really need to change their attitudes about photography and "privacy" in public places.
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that may not mean what you think (Score:3, Interesting)
Yes, but that may not mean what you think it means.
French laws apparently are restrictions on publishing, not taking, pictures. So, Google can legally take those pictures, and legally take them out of French jurisdiction. And since they are not subject to French laws in the US, they can publish them in the US unedited. Google would seem to be in full compliance with all local laws at all times.
They do it in China, with their censored Google, s
Re:that may not mean what you think (Score:5, Informative)
2. By taking, recording or transmitting, without his or her consent, the picture of a person who is in a private place.
When you take pictures on the street of somebody in a window of their house that is considered private. Google does that and hence is violating the law.
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Compare vs. Britain ... (Score:4, Interesting)
Before people jump all over me about the diffences, yes, I realize that this is apples-to-oranges. There are lots of differences in how and why the laws are written, and a big difference between law enforcement cameras (presumably not for public distribution or corporate profit), and Google cameras, etc etc etc.
What surprises me is that two societies with such close physical, economic, historic (+/- ad infinitum) ties have such radically different expectations of control over personal images taken in public.
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Let say that you take a picture of a street full of apartments. (This is the case in Paris) And in one of those shots you happen to take there is a woman changing. Yes the shot is inadvertent, but it is invasion of privacy because the angle of the shot happens to include both the street and the woman.
As the article said:
2. By taking, recording or transmitting, without his or her consent, the picture of a person who is in a private place.
When you are on the
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Here: [info-france-usa.org] "It should be borne in mind that the protection of privacy afforded by article 9 of the Civil Code is quite wide, since it operates both in a public and in a private place
I thought it provides an interesting contrast to the rhetoric in the recent
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Re:When in Rome... (Score:5, Insightful)
Re:When in Rome... (Score:4, Funny)
Re:When in Rome... (Score:5, Insightful)
Re:When in Rome... (Score:4, Insightful)
Perfect! - So when I as a swede set up the new Piratebay in new York I only has to worry about swedish laws? - Grrrrrrreat!
Come on, you follow the laws in the country you're in - it's that easy.
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Re:When in Rome... (Score:5, Funny)
Ask Yahoo if they need to obey local laws (Score:5, Informative)
They lost in the French Nazi auction case [cnn.com], which established the precedent that even big American Internet companies have to abide by national laws. The excuse that the Internet is some sort of separate place, or that national laws have no clout in the Internet Age died right then and there, in 2000.
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Do I have to pay the ticket? No, but then again France reserves the right to refuse to let me into their country. Google has the same problem.
The whole Street View idea... (Score:4, Informative)
Personally, I just don't see the overwhelming need for it. I've never really needed to see what a road or a street looks like before driving on it. The only case that springs to mind is for odd places way out in remote areas, where there the lay-out may be different... but that's exactly the sort of place that would never get put into the StreetView system anyway.
So, does anyone find StreetView genuinely useful enough to be worth all the privacy hassle?
Re:The whole Street View idea... (Score:5, Interesting)
StreetView has its purpose, it's really a matter of how follow directions.
Also, I've been using it for house hunting in the city I live in. I'm able to see what kind of homes are in the different neighborhoods around town without driving all over the place. Once I find some neighborhoods that I like I drive there myself just to get a feel for the area in person.
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So, does anyone find StreetView genuinely useful enough to be worth all the privacy hassle?
I would/will find it useful if/when it covers German cities. I'm not a native of this country (or Europe, or even the Northern Hemisphere for that matter) and sometimes a map just isn't enough. The satellite view on Google Maps is handy, but still not quite good enough, since rooftops can look quite different to the view from below.
The problem comes when I have a hard time identifying something that I see with my own eyes as being a street or not. That's a lot more common than you'd think here! Espec
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Not resistance, but law! (Score:5, Insightful)
It is not resistance, it is the french law.
As a French citizen, I find the Slashdot title offensive.
Paris is the capital of a free sovereign country, France, which has its own Constitution and legal system, which is not the US ones!
The title implies that american law should prevail everywhere! No! France is not a US colony.
I am sure that most american (& french) citizens would expect French coorporations (e.g. Thales, Air Liquide,
Why should it be different for Google (an american coorporation) in France?
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Re:Not resistance, but law! (Score:4, Insightful)
This NOT insightful (Score:2)
* Google's Street View Meets Resistance In France
Now compare to :
* Google's Street View expected to respect french privacy law for french streets
Just like you can influence the response of a person to a question by formulating it in a way or another, I have started to expect that all title of article in slashdot or skewed to force a knee jerk reaction, like yellow newspaper. It is not really patriotic chest b
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Yes, and current French law would actually have made it difficult - if not impossible - for French photographers such as Cartier-Bresson to practice their art, no? What about Doisneau and Ronis? Boubet? It seems like an entire period of French public life is going to be recorded but not published or displayed the way much of the 20th century was - due to fear of lawsuits. There are limits in the US, but generally anything that is taken in public, and is for editorial purposes (including artistic) is legal - commercial use (like advertising) requires a release. Sure, France can pass any law - but it's unfortunate that something like French street photography - which has had a particularly lyric quality to it - should be limited now. I would have enjoyed seeing what that tradition, reinvented with today's technology, might've been able to show. Bringing that humanist tradition to bear on the spontaneous moments of everyday public life would be especially welcome in today's world. I guess future generations will have to settle for mass-media portrayals of today's life, and news coverage of spectacle and tragedy. That's ok, if it's actually what the people of France want. It seems like something is being lost, though.
I thought of this, too. In addition, does that make journalistic photography a non-existent profession in France? You can't legally take a picture of a crowd at, say... a protest against the war in Iraq... without getting explicit permission from everybody on the street? After all, the street is a "private place" and all.
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When the Germans march over you don't even fight like the Brits, but just lie down and start shovelling Jews into the gas chambers. The only reason you're free is that we liberated your shitty little country and gave it back to you.
Hello Sir. the WWII is over for 60 years. Look this is your grand daughter she came especially from the states to see you. You have nothing to fear, don't hide in the bunker anymore. See? Ohama beach is quite peaceful now. Please give us your weapons, you could hurt one of t
California has a similar law (Score:5, Interesting)
California has a similar law, Civil Code section 3344 [findlaw.com]. This covers "publicity rights". Each person's "publicity right" in recognizable images of themself is by law worth at least $750, if used in any manner related to advertising or selling. If you're famous, the price goes up, to cover "actual damages".
So if you're in California and recognizable in Google StreetView, you could put in a claim. It's not worth it unless you're a major celebrity.
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The online French Yellow Pages has street photos (Score:4, Interesting)
Photography in France (Score:2)
There are over 5000 infringing photographs of people in France on Corbis if you search for 'crowd france'.
http://www.corbis.com/ [corbis.com]
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Re:Photography in France (Score:5, Interesting)
Don't you remember the Australian Virgin mobile fiasco ? They had taken pictures from Flickr under the Creative Common license for their advertising campaign. So far, so good. However, they did not have the consent of the people on the pictures.
Now, the family of the girl on the picture got a little wild and sued both Virgin and Creative Commons. The latter case has been dropped, but I believe the former is still ongoing.
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I'm not aware of the specific laws in France, it just seems to me that these picture agencies would have thoroughly investigated that before selling pictures of people
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What we are currently looking at is article 226-1 [legifrance.gouv.fr] of the law texts.
Est puni d'un an d'emprisonnement et de 45000 euros d'amende le fait, au moyen d'un procédé quelconque, volontairement de porter atteinte à l'intimité de la vie privée d'autrui
1 En captant, enregistrant ou transmettant, sans le consentement de leur auteur, des paroles prononcées à titre privé o
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Est puni d'un an d'emprisonnement et de 45000 euros d'amende le fait, au moyen d'un procédé quelconque, volontairement de porter atteinte à l'intimité de la vie privée d'autrui : ;
:
1 En captant, enregistrant ou transmettant, sans le consentement de leur auteur, des paroles prononcées à titre privé ou confidentiel
2 En fixant, enregistrant ou transmettant, sans le consentement de celle-ci, l'image d'une personne se trouvant dans un lieu privé.
Lorsque les actes mentionnés au présent article ont été accomplis au vu et au su des intéressés sans qu'ils s'y soient opposés, alors qu'ils étaient en mesure de le faire, le consentement de ceux-ci est présumé.
It is punishable by one year's imprisonment and a fine of 45,000 euros to intrude on the private life of others by any means
1. In capturing, recording or transmitting, without the consent of their author, their words spoken in a private or confidential context;
2. In capturing, recording or transmitting, without the consent of the subject, the image of someone situated in a private place
When the acts mentioned in this article have been in sight and with the knowledge of the interested parties, without any opposition from them, even though they were able to oppose it, the consent of those parties is assumed.
Please forgive the rough translation.
In fact it says that you do not have the right to take or transmit pictures without people's consent when they are 'in a private place'. It doesn't say anything about public places (there may be another article of the law about that, I don't know). Like you I'm not a lawyer, but this law doesn't say what you said it does about photography in *public* places, and thus doesn't apply t
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Streetview is content shown by google to get viewers for their advertisements, When you are part of that content, why shouldn't you have rights to part of the income? Or at least have the right to be removed.
"Providing those details would be inappropriate" (Score:5, Informative)
Re:"Providing those details would be inappropriate (Score:2)
It wasn't an interesting idea, it was the typical non-story media beatup our Australian news papers love to do. It's not even bloody comparable, it's not like I can type in "Jeff Blackmore" and it shows me his house and address or something like that. I guess Australians [me being one of them] don't realise that *gasps* people who drive
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Rights of Personality (Score:4, Insightful)
The trend, and the goal, is to be able to read more people, at greater distance. We don't know how far this technology can go, but some of the things already being tested are capable enough to give one pause. If you are not allowed to think unauthorized thoughts (to question the state; to remember a song without paying royalties), do you have a personality? Do you have free will? It seems to me that at that point, consciousness would be a curse.
Gene Wolfe wrote, I believe in Soldier of the Mist, that "A man without a sword is a slave." I would contend that today it's more relevant to say that a man without privacy is a prisoner; a man without private thoughts is a slave.
It's nice to know that some places still maintain the concept of a right to privacy.
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There are better ways of getting at privacy.
A wise man once said (Score:2)
That's what I think about the Google Street Maps. Personally, at least for me it would be a perfect tool (as I was born in NYC but haven't been back home in 9 years), so being able to plan a trip would be awesome. That being said, however a lot of people (perhaps rightly or wrongly) have deep fear and differing views of privacy, so we have to accomodate the "lowest common denominator" of the population; which for Google woul
Don't trust that (Score:4, Interesting)
crazy attitudes (Score:2, Insightful)
My conclusion? Avoid France for tourism, and publish the pict
At first I was suprised about this (Score:2)
Always look beneath the surface at the laws of a nation.
Already exists in France, hence legal in some way (Score:2)
Re:Easily contourné (Score:5, Interesting)
Yeah, it's a cool thing to be able to browse the streets of a city in 3D, but honestly, who wants their faces, car plates, etc. published for all to see? Not everybody. And until it's everybody then we should assume nobody except with express consent.
It's a matter of common decency, not just law. I hate it when people talk as though the law is the only thing we should pay any attention to.
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How about getting a permit to get authorities to temporarily (say 10 minutes at most) block off certain streets to take pictures of the streets at every location desirable. I can't imagine it would take much longer. Benefits? People who inevitably meander into the pictures most likely want to be in the picture and don't really have much of a right to compl
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I didn't notice the car go by at the time.
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The best solution is to run the project, using as many cameras/cars possible, during the month of August - this town is dead then. Save of course for the 'touristy' areas - whose numbers (especially during that month) co
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How about getting a permit to get authorities to temporarily (say 10 minutes at most) block off certain streets to take pictures of the streets at every location desirable. I can't imagine it would take much longer. Benefits? People who inevitably meander into the pictures most likely want to be in the picture and don't really have much of a right to complain. They were warned (by signs, guards, etc.) and they got in (conversely, egomaniacs might not see it as a bad thing to have their faces on Google Maps). Disadvantages? Possibly slowing business down a bit, but it would be a one time thing and I imagine the benefit to small, relatively undiscovered businesses would be enormous. A small B&B with references on Google Maps would boost sales as I know a lot of people that consult TripAdvisor reviews (supplements that appear to the Google Maps images) to decide where to go during vacation trips or even routine business trips.
France has 370,000 km of roads, not counting motorways. Even if you only did this in cities the cost would be enormous and it would inevitable cause huge disruption. To avoid creating massive traffic problems you wouldn't be able to block off nearby streets one after another, the most efficient way, so the process would have to be drawn out over a reasonable period of time. Compare this to the current system - a car drives down the road - and you can see that the cost increase would be huge. Plus the benef
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The solution shouldn't be making pissing in the street illegal. It should be taking a picture of it that's illegal.
IOW, if you're pissing in the street, you shouldn't be mad when someone takes a picture of it.
Re:Easily contourné (Score:4, Insightful)
I don't understand this French law thing. Let me see if I can get it straight...
If I'm walking down a public street in Paris, I assume I'm allowed to look at other people, and be looked at by other people. If I have a camera with me I assume I'm allowed to take pictures, as I do not, and no one else, has any expectation of privacy. You're on a public street.
Now if I publish those photos, given that any person viewing the images could have just as well been there at the scene at the time I took the images and seen it for themselves without violating anyone's privacy, I assume that there's no violation of privacy there either.
Thus we find ourselves in Google's situation. So what is the privacy problem here?
If they were to pick a person at random and use that person in advertising in a way that made it seem the person was endorsing something, then that shouldn't really be allowed unless the person actually does endorse the product and agreed to be represented as such. But that's not happening here.
If the person had some reasonable expectation of privacy, such as walking around a gym locker room in the buff, or in a public restroom, or in their own home or on private property not viewable from a public area, that would be different. Doesn't seem like that's happening here either.
Where is the big ethical problem here? I just don't see it.
Re:Easily contourné (Score:4, Informative)
You don't actually have permission to take photos of any faces in public. It's the same law in other countries. People have to consent to having their picture taken. Of course there is spillage and people unwittingly enter millions of tourist happy-snaps.
But if I take photos with identifiable faces and publish them on my blog or website or whatever, the people who own the faces can claim offense if I didn't ask them first.
The big ethical problem is that if there aren't these controls on how your photo/voice/identity is used, then people get exploited.
In many countries, you are not even permitted to photograph the front lawn of someone's private residence, even though it is the 'public face' of his home. Not everybody wants their stuff photographed, thank you very much.
Re:Easily contourné (Score:4, Insightful)
Bullshit.
The big ethical problem is that if there aren't these controls on how your photo/voice/identity is used, then people get exploited.
The only "ethical problem" is if nitwits want to restrict the public's right to document public events in public places. That's a threat to our democracy, not because people are desperate to document your bad hair day or lack of style, but because those restrictions could be used by individuals and corporations to prevent the release of embarrassing but information of public interest on them.
In many countries, you are not even permitted to photograph the front lawn of someone's private residence, even though it is the 'public face' of his home.
Well, that may be the case in North Korea, but I can't think of any democracies where that's the case.
Not everybody wants their stuff photographed, thank you very much.
If you are in a public place in a country that doesn't specifically prohibit it, you're fair game to be photographed and published on the web; I don't give a damn if you want to or not. And if there is a compelling interest to photograph you, I'll do so even in countries where there are laws against it.
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The issue was that "The respondent brought an action in civil liability against the appellants, a photographer and the publisher of a magazine, for taking and publishing, in a magazine dedicated to the arts, a photograph showing the respondent, then aged 17, sitting on the steps of a building. The photograph, which was taken in a public place, was published without the respondent
Re:Easily contourné (Score:4, Informative)
Here's a few of links explaining the situation in the UK, Australia and US for photography of people in public places :
UK [sirimo.co.uk]
US [krages.com]
Australia [4020.net]
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There is also a fair possibility that photographs of people may be subject to the Data Protection Act, which controls the âoeprocessingâ of âoepersonal dataâ, that is, data relating to an individual from which the individual can be identiïed. The deïnitions of these terms are complex, but taking a photograph of a recognisable person would appear to ït within them. The Act contains an exception for processing undertaken with a view to publication of
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Taking photographs of a person in a public place would not normally be regarded as an invasion of privacy.
So photographs in the street are not illegal. What would be illegal would be entering private property or taking photos of people in a situation where they have a reasonable expectation of privacy (in their back garden, inside their house, etc). Google doesn't use telephoto lenses - I suppose it's conceivable they could be asked to remove a picture of the interior of someone's property from the street (if such a thing ended up on Goog
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All I can say is, I'm glad I'm a photographer in the US rather than in France (except for the overzealous photographer=terrorist part, although maybe they have that too). Apparently I
wrong sense of decency (Score:2, Offtopic)
In many countries, I have a legal right to take your picture if you are in a public place, and I also have the right to publish your picture, even against your consent (with some well-defined exceptions, like I can't maliciously and for no reason embarrass you).
I will defend that right. And even in countries where the law may attempt to restrict that right, I may deli
Re:Easily contourné (Score:5, Insightful)
IE - USA! USA! USA! We'll do whatever we want, only when it suits us.
Those days are over, mon ami.
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Yes, a lot of anti-French sentiment in the US, and a lot of laughter and "I told you so's" in France. Now hush, or I shall be forced to taunt you once again. I fart in your general direction.
Re:Easily contourné (Score:2, Funny)
Re:Easily contourné (Score:2)
1. taking a picture in France
or
2. publishing it in France?
To avoid (1), take the picture from space.
To avoid (2), put the servers in the U.S.
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Now if the aforementioned act of publication occurs by means of being placed on a web server[3], any hack lawyer could make a pretty good argument that the server's location is precisely what matters.
[1] which it is
[2] which it isn't
[3] which it is
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Brings up another point - should Google recognize and blur obvious personal identifiers like license plates?
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