Google's Bangalore Streetview Project Stalled 108
GillBates0 writes "The Bangalore Police have objected to the collection of data by Google's cars, which were criss-crossing Bangalore city taking high definition images to give users 360 degree views of streets. Talking about the security concerns in an earlier interview with CNN-IBN, Google India Product Head Vinay Goel said, 'We are only driving on public roads and taking publicly available imagery so what we are not doing is going into a specific installation and taking private pictures and obviously we are working with the authorities so if there are certain locations they don't want us to be there we won't go there, we are happy working with the authorities here.'"
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I'm mildly disappointed (Score:3)
From TFA:
Bangalore has several top security installments like ISRO, DRDO and HAL and the fear could be that a 360 degree view of the roads leading to them could be used by a terrorist in the future.
So THAT is what their concern with Streetview is. Always terror and terrorism isn't it, when in reality, the real concern is that, public images or not, people might actually not like living in a f*ing worldwide Panopticon...
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As for the terrorism angle, yeah, that's just a crock, but it always is when it comes to photography.
War against photography (Score:5, Informative)
Their words, not mine
http://www.schneier.com/blog/archives/2008/06/the_war_on_phot.html [schneier.com]
http://pajamasmedia.com/instapundit/115726/ [pajamasmedia.com]
http://www.google.com/search?q=war+against+photography [google.com]
Re:I'm mildly disappointed (Score:5, Insightful)
For example, steal a penny from a single person, that's nothing serious. Steal a penny from every single person in America, pretty soon you're talking about real money (or staplers, at least).
Copy a page from a book, that's fair use. Copy every single page from a book, that's copyright infringement.
Smoke a cigarette once, you'll probably not get lung cancer. Smoke 12 packs a day every single day of your life, you'll probably get lung cancer.
So yeah, Street View is completely different from a photographer taking pictures.
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Oh please. When was the last time a photographer went around the world to take a picture of every single fscking road?
Does the quantity really matter? Would you feel less concerned if "only" your entire city and your whereabouts was photographed?
Or even just the city block where you live?
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Re:I'm mildly disappointed (Score:5, Insightful)
Indeed. Quantitative differences do add up to qualitative differences. On the flipside, googles streetview doesn't disproportionally focus on "interesting" subjects like photographers do, thus despite being "public" most of the things photographed in streetview are still quite anonymous.
The most creepy databases by far these days, must be those of mobile-phone-companies. The level of detail they capture 24x7x365 about literally 95% of the population above age 12, is *staggering*, and they've got demographic data on most of those subscribers too.
A close-to-complete social map, for example, should be fairly doable to construct, just from observing who calls eachothers or send SMS to eachothers, you can even assign fairly accurate weights to the relationships based on frequency of call/sms and frequency and duration of being in the same spots.
They need to know what base-station your phone is near right now, for the technic to work. But why they are allowed to, or indeed in some cases *required* to keep this data for months or years, is beyond me.
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A close-to-complete social map, for example, should be fairly doable to construct, just from observing who calls eachothers or send SMS to eachothers, you can even assign fairly accurate weights to the relationships based on frequency of call/sms and frequency and duration of being in the same spots.
Not "should be possible", "is happening."
I can tell you for certain this is taking place and they are collecting and already using this data to try and make more money. One of the things they look for is for who are the "influencers." For example, they have noted that certain people send short text messages and make short outgoing calls, but often get many responses that are much longer. Think of someone who just says "sup?" and 10 people respond with big stories about their day or offers to hang out,
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I would have agreed with that a couple of years ago. But in the more recent past, I've been using social media sites and IM (using my phone, no less) for the same. In fact, while I was in college and high-school
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That's true for some subset of the population. SMS is being used less than it was at the peak, because Facebook and Twitter and suchlike has taken over parts of that.
But locationdata, phones and SMS is still very poweful. Notice that typically not only the cell you're in, but your signal-strength to all towers in range, are logged, which gives positioning that's more accurate than just which cell you're in.
If you know the customer is a male 17 year old, and he spends a lot of time with a male 16 year old sc
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That's true for some subset of the population. SMS is being used less than it was at the peak, because Facebook and Twitter and suchlike has taken over parts of that.
But locationdata, phones and SMS is still very poweful. Notice that typically not only the cell you're in, but your signal-strength to all towers in range, are logged, which gives positioning that's more accurate than just which cell you're in.
If you know the customer is a male 17 year old, and he spends a lot of time with a female 16 year old
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Oh please. I'm sure people made almost identical arguments against maps.
"With every road fully listed criminals will know where everything is, and every road the police could use to catch them! Maps are only okay when they're of small disconnected areas so that you could never use a map to tell how to get from here to there, or anything else dangerous."
Even if this stuff was so dangerous people could simply record their own by driving the path once with a cell-phone recording video. The cat has fully remove
"Secret phonebook problem" variant (Score:1)
>Scale makes all the difference in many things.
The argument against Google's streetview seems to be a variant of the "secretive government agency phone book problem", In that example, the entire phone book is classified but individual numbers are not.
https://webcache.googleusercontent.com/search?q=cache:-x18fG3G-ioJ:www.acsac.org/secshelf/book001/24.pdf+&hl=en&gl=us [googleusercontent.com]
Similarly, Google is right that it is taking pictures of public streets, which people are generally free to do (sensitive locations
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I don't get what the problem is with a f*ing worldwide Panopticon. I seriously wouldn't mind. Even if the lot surrounding our house has no fence, and you could see us, say, sleeping outside on the hammock. Big f*ing deal.
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You can't seriously not think that events like the terrorist attacks in Mumbai (http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/November_2008_Mumbai_attacks) do not seriously affect the Indian government's actions. Even Bangalore was rocked with bombings in July that year. You can bet that they're going to do everything to ensure that another string of bombings doesn't occur there.
Anecdotal evidence: I was traveling through Jammu (the state neighboring Kashmir) just after Benazir Bhutto was assassinated. The entire place was
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[Your words] ... it's figuring out how to shoot it out/ blow it up, as well as (optionally) get away afterwards.
For all of which, photography is useful.
And of course, you could obtain sufficient, sufficiently accurate photography with a camera in a bag (on 1Hz shots) and an accomplice walking around with a 1m walking stick ("ranging pole", in the technical terminology). Of course, you could protect against this by imp
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I reject the notion that we must hide any and all information that could be remotely useful to terrorists and criminals.
Might as well take down every site that describes how locks work, how cars are wired, how explosives are made, how to use a gun, etc. etc. etc.
That's where this goes if you start cherry-picking and saying "this information, despite being public knowledge, is not safe."
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I don't have a problem with your mother being my sex slave.
Fortunately, rights aren't about one person's preference getting to determine everyone's way of life.
Mostly.
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I don't get what the problem is with a f*ing worldwide Panopticon. I seriously wouldn't mind. Even if the lot surrounding our house has no fence, and you could see us, say, sleeping outside on the hammock. Big f*ing deal.
I don't think you're going to get many supporters of that view here.
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Life is full of tradeoffs. Being seen in real time from a public right of way is the least of my concerns.
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...Quick ban all maps ....
Truth strikes (Score:2)
Instead of bitching about the new reality make use of the tools it provides to help wipe out corruption.
Re:I'm mildly disappointed (Score:4, Informative)
India has had a problem with Google, Mapquest and everyone else since the Mumbai Terror Attacks in 2008.
Remember that? 164 dead, over 300 wounded and the terrorists used Google Earth to pan the attacks and figure out where to go.
http://www.telegraph.co.uk/news/worldnews/asia/india/3691723/Mumbai-attacks-Indian-suit-against-Google-Earth-over-image-use-by-terrorists.html [telegraph.co.uk]
So maybe India has a reason to have a problem with Google Streetview
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Like invading Pakistan and destroying the ISI?
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164 dead, over 300 wounded
Oh my! That's like two days traffic fatalities. Perhaps they're missing the bigger picture?
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Smell that? (Score:2)
How to make a man sound flustered (Score:1)
"'We are only driving on public roads and taking publicly available imagery so what we are not doing is going into a specific installation and taking private pictures and obviously we are working with the authorities so if there are certain locations they don't want us to be there we won't go there, we are happy working with the authorities here."
61 words in a single sentence makes Google sound rather flustered by the accusation.
This manager would sound much more relaxed with a bit of punctuation:
"'We ar
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Middle East and Far east are the two etymologies that you should be comparing. Just because something is in South Asia doesn't mean it's not in the Middle East (or, indeed the Far East). Most of what we'd term the Middle East is technically South West Asia (As Africa stops at the Sinai Peninsula, that part of Egypt is actually in Asia too) and I would include Pakistan in the sphere of "Middle East" more than Far East, but it's an interesting case though, as any further East you have the likes of China, Bhut
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I know quite a bit about the history of Pakistan and India, and while elements of Indian culture remains, the forced division of the country by the collapse of the British Empire caused alot of that to disappear. It's also the reason Pakistan is a predominately Muslim country. When the division was created, most of the Hindu tribes living on the border region fled to India (around 12 million of them), leading directly to conflicts between India and Pakistan, pushing Pakistan to not only turn to it's neighbo
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My own definition would be anything between the Red Sea/East Med shore and the Indus River that bisects the Indian subcontinent.
The thing is, your definition is wrong. Pakistanis no more in the Middle East than Chicago.
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The guy was talking, not writing. Any punctuation was imagined by the reporter or editor.
If you simply write down exactly what someone says in an unscripted interview, it's easy to make them look like a doofus by including every umm, err, false start. Most people don't speak in perfect prose.
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Real reason: (Score:2)
What are they hiding? (Score:2, Funny)
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No need to be so judgemental. India has some serious paranoia around photography, due to terrorism. When we were there on holiday, we were told for instance that it might not be a good idea to take photos at railway stations if we valued our cameras.
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that might have been due to a risk of some guy snatching away your camera.
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Google: Let's pretend we don't understand it. (Score:4, Interesting)
Although similar complaints have been heard for the last couple of years, Google keep pretending they do not understand it. Arguments like "but we only take pictures of public areas" are just silly and besides the point.
Google ignore the fact that there is a massive difference between a public place being public and a public place being available to everyone on the internet (including data gathering servers, and all kinds of face recognition technologies).
And anyway, they accidentally take lots of pictures of not-so-public places because open doors/windows offer a glimpse into private houses and companies.
Google also always place the responsibility for pointing out what cannot be put on the internet with other people/companies/authorities. It's like the checkbox saying 'no, I don't want advertisement', which if left unchecked will get you on some spam email list. Right now, other people/companies/authorities spend a lot of time (and time = money) to get pictures off the internet. I think that Google should be paying for that time spent.
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Not that it undermines the main thrust of your argument, but I feel that sloppy investigating on your part makes you look weak - Specifically:
Google's the world leader in face recognition technology. It uses this technology to identify faces in streetview and blur them out. The best you can rant about is that Google themselves may have a private database of times when people who've been tagged elsewhere in Google have wandered past a streetview car at a particular time. For the rest of us, there's always "t
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You make a fair point that the pictures are only available to Google's own face recognition technologies... and until now not to third party technologies.
My sloppy investigation indeed did not tell me whether the unblurred pictures or the blurred pictures (or both) are stored at Google's servers. Do you know by any chance? In other words: is there any chance that Google will sell the unblurred pictures to third parties in the future?
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is there any chance that Google will sell the unblurred pictures to third parties in the future?
Who in their right fucking mind gives a shit? You're asking the police to quash a perfectly legal operation because someone might have an unblurred picture of a complete stranger and might sell that to someone who might piece together who is in the photo (amidst billions of photos/people) and said third party might use it for some unspecified underhanded purpose.
Tin foil hat much?
No, I'm not talking about one single picture. Nobody in the 'right fucking mind gives a shit'. And I also do not wish to obstruct police investigations.
I'm talking about Google being (perhaps) able to sell pictures of a couple billion people... They can sell the rights to all the streetview pictures at once. And that has a commercial interest. And it can get coupled to Facebook or another huge website (where you can tag your friends). Suddenly large companies have even more interesting information for targe
Re:Google: Let's pretend we don't understand it. (Score:5, Insightful)
Google ignore the fact that there is a massive difference between a public place being public and a public place being available to everyone on the internet (including data gathering servers, and all kinds of face recognition technologies).
Your argument would apply not only to Google, but everyone who puts any picture on their blog/Facebook/Twitter/emails to his auntie.
Any photo on the Internet is available to EVERYONE in the world. If you stop Google doing it, you must stop everyone. If Google bends over, then the precedent is pretty awful for everyone else.
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Any photo on the Internet is available to EVERYONE in the world. If you stop Google doing it, you must stop everyone.
What kind of bizarre ass-backwards broken logic is that?
Those people get to choose whether or not they put pictures on the internet. They do not get to choose whether google puts pictures of them on the internet.
You're also getting awfully close to the whole "corporations are people" line of thinking. They are not and I see no good reason why corporations and people should be held to the same
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So you will have no problems with this, if Google maps was an open-source project run by "a bunch of people" instead of a corporation?
Focusing on the wrong thing, aren't we?
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So you will have no problems with this, if Google maps was an open-source project run by "a bunch of people" instead of a corporation?
Are you claiming that corporation behavoiur shouldn't be regulated, or that this is not a case where it should be regulated?
What you suggest is an interesting philosophical point. Of course, there is always a complete continuum from entirely acceptable behaviour to entirely unacceptable behaviour. The line generally needs to be drawn somewhere and it will always seem unfair
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I didn't claim any such thing.
I guess I will need to be more explicit. It shouldn't matter here whether it was a "corporation" doing this or if it was a bunch of people doing it. Is the thing they are doing, a problem in itself?
And it is hard to scale up open-source/crowd-sourced projects? What have you been smoking? You lack the imagination, I am afraid. But for hints, I will recommend a look at the entire Linux community or even all of the flicker/twitter/internet/whatnot(when you consider that it is "a b
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Those people get to choose whether or not they put pictures on the internet. They do not get to choose whether google puts pictures of them on the internet.
So you're saying that this guy got the permission of the ~400 people in this photo?:
http://www.flickr.com/photos/wesbs/5273648283/ [flickr.com]
There are lots of geotagged or labelled images on the web now, and the trend is clearly upward. Lots of people over-shard on Facebook, and yes that includes people who might take your photo and not ask you before uploading it. Google may have good coverage, but open photo sites are easier to scrape and make no attempt to blur faces. Facebook has just-enough-to-b
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Technology will catch up; eventually you'll be able to scan photos for your face, and then, laws permitting, commence with a 'pay up or take it down' action.
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So you're saying that this guy got the permission of the ~400 people in this photo?:
Try reading the parent post I was replying to. It was about people putting up photos of themselves.
While your point is valid, it has nothing to do with what I was saying.
Say what you want about "righteous standards of behavior", but the horse left the barn a long time ago.
I didn't say anything about "righteous standards of behavior", so I've no idea why you have it in quotes like that.
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Those people get to choose whether or not they put pictures on the internet. They do not get to choose whether google puts pictures of them on the internet.
Well, "bizarre ass-backwards broken logic" indeed. Many people are "choosing" to put pictures of OTHER PEOPLE on the Internet, and those that seek permission from the subjects would be a very small minority.Good luck trying to stop a bunch of teenagers from putting up their snaps, or videos, if they catch you doing something embarrassing in a street alley.
You're also getting awfully close to the whole "corporations are people" line of thinking.
Well, by default, they are. But if you want to have laws that people can do this, but corporations can't, you'd better get lobbying.
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No, they don't. The person putting up the picture chooses, but does everyone in the picture get to choose? No, they do not. They're along for ride whether they wish it or not.
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Google ignore the fact that there is a massive difference between a public place being public and a public place being available to everyone on the internet (including data gathering servers, and all kinds of face recognition technologies).
That, or you ignore the fact that legally and for all purposes of the word public, there isn't.
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No, they're recognizing the fact that this difference WILL go away. It might be Google who does it, or it might be someone less well-known (and less monitored). But someone will do it.
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"We'd be happy to work with them.." (Score:2)
Why do people say "I'll/We'll be happy to [__insert_pain_in_the_ass_here__] ".
They never really mean it. I mean, for example why would google be happy to inconvenience themselves .. seriously? Feel good corporate speak. /rant off
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It's not really "corporate" in any way.
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Coming soon - Google StreetListen (Score:1)
A record of all conversations and sounds audible from public places.
Record this - "Fsck you Brin and Page"
A rather unpleasant thought (Score:1)
...we are happy working with the authorities...