http://www.thehindu.com/todays-paper/article2052878.ece 

Bangalore, May 27, 2011 

Bangalore is the first city in the country to be mapped for Street View
SNAP SHOTS:Google will start collecting images by using cars and trikes fitted 
with cameras. 
Not too long from now, Google Map will allow you a sneak peak into the smallest 
cul-de-sac in the city, zoom into the most popular restaurant on the block, or 
even check out a home you want to rent.

Google on Thursday announced it will begin collecting images in Bangalore for 
its controversial Street View service, which will be offered on Google Maps. 
The service will allow you to explore places through its 360-degree, 
street-level imagery.

This, it intends to do by using cars and "trikes" (three-wheel pedicab) fitted 
with a camera system on top. The vehicles "will start gathering images from 
select locations in and around Bangalore, such as the Nrityagram Dance Village 
over the next few weeks," Google said in a communiqué.

"We decided to start driving in Bangalore because it is the IT capital of India 
and feel that the IT-savvy users will be able to leverage the benefits of the 
product to the fullest," said Vinay Goel, Product Head, Google India. Street 
View, introduced in May 2007 in the U.S., has since expanded to 27 countries. 
"It is useful for urban development planners, law enforcement agencies, 
house-hunters, and travellers," Mr. Goel said.

Privacy issues

But is Google venturing too close for comfort? The service has begun to draw 
criticism over a host of privacy issues here, just as it has done in several 
countries where it is in use. This despite Google assurance that it will blur 
people's faces and licence plates so they are not identified.

However, in the absence of a broad privacy law, there is no mechanism by which 
the Indian Government can hold Google and its service accountable, explains 
Sunil Abraham, Director of the Centre for Internet and Society.

"For example, the Japanese Government found that Google's footage was recording 
the insides of people's homes," he pointed out. Subsequently, the Japanese 
Government decided to reduce the height of the camera by 16 inches.

Individual concepts

"Every country has a different concept of privacy and any project by Google has 
to adhere to the local sensibility. But India lacks the mechanism to do so." 
Further, Mr. Abraham said, given the fact that 90 per cent of the population is 
offline, and a third illiterate, a Google logo on the van may not serve as 
implicit consent (unlike in the U.S. where it is a widely recognised brand).

Not real time

According to Google, it protects privacy because Street View images are not 
real time, but are between a few months to a few years old. There are "easily 
accessible tools that [allow] users to request further blurring of any image 
that features the user, their family, their car or their home," says the Google 
Maps website. "Users can also request the removal of images that feature 
inappropriate content (for example, nudity or violence)."

---

IF we not part of the solution then we are part of the problem  
With Regards
Pradeep T.S
SyndicateBank
Information Technology Cell
Regional Office Bangalore
Mobile: 9845925188
email: pradeep_bana...@rediffmail.com
skype: pradeepsocialwork
Search for old postings at:
http://www.mail-archive.com/accessindia@accessindia.org.in/

To unsubscribe send a message to
accessindia-requ...@accessindia.org.in
with the subject unsubscribe.

To change your subscription to digest mode or make any other changes, please 
visit the list home page at
http://accessindia.org.in/mailman/listinfo/accessindia_accessindia.org.in

Reply via email to