Google Offers a Bird's-Eye View, and Some Governments Tremble
By KATIE HAFNER and SARITHA RAI - NY Times
http://tinyurl.com/c94em

When Google introduced Google Earth, free software that marries satellite
and aerial images with mapping capabilities, the company emphasized its
usefulness as a teaching and navigation tool, while advertising the pure
entertainment value of high-resolution flyover images of the Eiffel Tower,
Big Ben and the pyramids.

But since its debut last summer, Google Earth has received attention of an
unexpected sort. Officials of several nations have expressed alarm over its
detailed display of government buildings, military installations and other
important sites within their borders.

India, whose laws sharply restrict satellite and aerial photography, has
been particularly outspoken. "It could severely compromise a country's
security," V. S. Ramamurthy, secretary in India's federal Department of
Science and Technology, said of Google Earth. And India's surveyor general,
Maj. Gen. M. Gopal Rao, said, "They ought to have asked us."

Similar sentiments have surfaced in news reports from other countries. South
Korean officials have said they fear that Google Earth lays bare details of
military installations. Thai security officials said they intended to ask
Google to block images of vulnerable government buildings. And Lt. Gen.
Leonid Sazhin, an analyst for the Federal Security Service, the Russian
security agency that succeeded the K.G.B., was quoted by Itar-Tass as
saying: "Terrorists don't need to reconnoiter their target. Now an American
company is working for them."

But there is little they can do, it seems, but protest.

Google Earth is the most conspicuous recent instance of increased openness
in a digitally networked world, where information that was once carefully
guarded is now widely available on personal computers. Many security experts
agree that such increased transparency - and the discomfort that it produces
- is an inevitable byproduct of the Internet's power and reach.

American experts in and outside government generally agree that the focus on
Google Earth as a security threat appears misplaced, as the same images that
Google acquires from a variety of sources are available directly from the
imaging companies, as well as from other sources. Google Earth licenses most
of the satellite images, for instance, from DigitalGlobe, an imaging company
in Longmont, Colo.

"Google Earth is not acquiring new imagery," said John Pike, director of
Globalsecurity.org, which has an online repository of satellite imagery.
"They are simply repurposing imagery that somebody else had already
acquired. So if there was any harm that was going to be done by the imagery,
it would already be done."

Google Earth was developed as a $79-a-year product by a small company called
Keyhole that Google bought last year; it was reintroduced as a free
downloadable desktop program in June. It consists of software that can be
downloaded onto a personal computer and used to "fly over" city streets,
landmarks, buildings, mountains, redwood forests and Gulf Stream waters.
Type in any street address in the United States, Canada or Britain, or the
longitude and latitude for any place - or even terms like "pyramids" or "Taj
Mahal" - and the location quickly zooms into focus from outer space.

It was in the 1990's that the federal government started allowing commercial
satellite companies to make and sell high-resolution images, to allow
American companies to compete in a growing market.

But a number of security restrictions apply to those companies. For
instance, United States law requires that images of Israel shot by
American-licensed commercial satellites be made available only at a
relatively low resolution. Also, the companies' operating licenses allow the
United States government to put any area off limits in the interests of
national security. A 24-hour delay is mandated for images of especially high
resolution.

Vipin Gupta, a security analyst at Sandia National Laboratories in
Albuquerque, said the time delays were crucial, saying that in the national
security sphere much can change between the time an image is taken and when
it is used by the public.

"You can get imagery to determine whether there is a military base or
airfield, but if you want to count aircraft, or determine whether there are
troops there at a particular time, it is very difficult to do," Mr. Gupta
said. "It's not video."

Andrew McLaughlin, a senior policy counsel at Google, said the company had
entered discussions with several countries over the last few months,
including Thailand, South Korea and, most recently, India.

India may be particularly sensitive to security issues because of its
long-running border disputes with Pakistan, its rival nuclear power, and
recurring episodes of terrorism. Since 1967, it has forbidden aerial
photographs of bridges, ports, refineries and military establishments, and
outside companies and agencies are required to have those images evaluated
by the government. High-resolution satellite photos face similar
restrictions in India, which has its own sophisticated satellite imaging
program.

Mr. Ramamurthy, the Indian science official, acknowledged that "there is
very little we can do to a company based overseas and offering its service
over the Internet." But General Rao, the Indian surveyor general, said the
Indian government had sent a letter asking Google "to show sensitive sites,
which we will list - areas such as the presidential residence and defense
installations - in very low-resolution images."

Mr. McLaughlin said he had not yet seen such a letter; he said talks with
India had centered specifically on images of the Kashmir border, long
disputed by India and Pakistan.

Meetings with Indian officials or those from other nations have yet to
result in a request that Google remove or downgrade any information, Mr.
McLaughlin said. Nor, he said, has the United States government ever asked
Google to remove information.

The same cannot be said for Mr. Pike, whose Web site has images of nuclear
test sites and military bases in much sharper focus than can be found on
Google Earth.

Last year, Mr. Pike said, he was asked by the National
Geospatial-Intelligence Agency, an arm of the Defense Department, to remove
from his site some of the maps of cities in Iraq that the Coalition
Provisional Authority had created for planning cellphone service.

Mr. Pike said he had complied, but added that the incident was a classic
example of the futility of trying to control information. "To think that the
same information couldn't be found elsewhere was not a very safe
assumption," he said.

Dave Burpee, a spokesman for the agency, said that the incident was
relatively isolated, and that Mr. Pike had been asked to remove the maps
because they were marked "limited distribution." A service like Google
Earth, on the other hand, contains nothing classified or restricted.

An outcry over security was the last thing John Hanke was thinking five
years ago when he joined in founding Keyhole with the aim of using satellite
and aerial photography to create a three-dimensional world map. The idea,
said Mr. Hanke, an entrepreneur who founded two video game companies before
starting Keyhole, was to make video games more interesting.

Now Mr. Hanke, as a general manager at Google in charge of Google Earth,
finds himself in the thick of frequent discussions at Google and with
outsiders about transparency. He speaks enthusiastically of the benefits of
openness. "A lot of good things come out of making information available,"
he said, and proceeded to list a few: "disaster relief, land conservation
and forest management for fighting wildfires."

The images, which Google Earth expects to update roughly every 18 months,
are a patchwork of aerial and satellite photographs, and their relative
sharpness varies. Blurriness is more often than not an indication of the
best quality available for a location.

Chuck Herring, a spokesman for DigitalGlobe, said that to the best of his
knowledge, the federal government had never asked his company to obscure or
blur images. Similarly, Mr. Hanke said no specific areas on Google Earth
lacked high-resolution data because of federal restrictions.

For a brief period, photos of the White House and adjacent buildings that
the United States Geological Survey provided to Google Earth showed up with
certain details obscured, because the government had decided that showing
details like rooftop helicopter landing pads was a security risk. Google has
since replaced those images with unaltered photographs of the area taken by
Sanborn, a mapping and imagery company, further illustrating the difficulty
of trying to control such information.

As for security issues raised by other countries, Mr. Hanke said, "When we
reach out and engage with knowledgeable people, the concern tends to
subside."

Still, imagery is growing harder than ever to control, especially as it
makes its way around the Internet. Several countries, notably Nigeria, China
and Brazil, have recently launched satellites, making it harder for any one
government to impose restrictions.

"When you have multiple eyes in the sky, what you're doing is creating a
transparent globe where anyone can get basic information about anyone else,"
said Mr. Gupta, the Sandia analyst. His recommendation to the Indian
government, he said, would be to accept the new reality: "Times are
changing, and the best thing to do is adapt to the advances in technology."

Andrew E. Kramer contributed reporting for this article.



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