Wednesday, August 11, 2010

Google to introduce 'Street View' in Germany

Google will introduce its ``Street View'' mapping feature for 20 of Germany's largest cities before the end of the year, the company announced Tuesday, launching a new debate over privacy in Germany.



German officials have been one of the harshest critics of the ``Street View'' program, which provides detailed photographs of neighborhoods taken by Google cameras.



At the insistence of authorities, the faces of individuals and licenses plates will be blurred and people can also ask to have images of their homes removed from the database starting next week a move aimed at dispelling privacy fears.



``The tool available before the launch of the service is unique to Germany,'' Google Inc. spokeswoman Lena Wagner said Tuesday, adding the company hopes to launch maps of the 20 cities in November, then expand the service.



The cities will include Berlin, Munich, Frankfurt, Hamburg and Cologne, among others. But privacy watchdogs remain critical as the announcement comes on short notice, in the middle of summer holidays, with residents only able to ask for their house to be removed for a four-week window.



Johannes Caspar, head of the Hamburg office for data protection, also criticized Google for refusing to set up a hot line to answer questions. He said has also urged Google be more transparent about how it plans to handle the data of those who object to the mapping program. ``Google is missing an opportunity to restore trust,'' he said in a statement.



Wagner insists the company is doing more than legally required to protect people's privacy. ``Street View'' has been controversial in Germany and other countries amid fears that people, filmed without their consent, could be seen on the panoramic footage doing things they didn't want to be seen doing or in places where they didn't want to be seen.



The US Internet giant lost the trust of many in Europe this spring when it had to acknowledge that the technology used by its ``Street View'' cars had also vacuumed up fragments of people's online activities broadcast over public hi-fi networks for the past four years.

Several thousand Germans already use ``Street View'' every week to plan holidays or to look up an area in one of the 23 countries covered so far, Wagner said. ``Talks with data protection officials are always controversial, but the users like 'Street View,''' she said.

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