Tag Archives: Google Street View

Germans fine Google for gathering personal data with Street View cars

Google must pay a €145,000 (US$190,000) fine in Germany for gathering and storing emails, photos, passwords and chat protocols from unprotected Wi-Fi networks with Google Street View cars, Hamburg’s Commissioner for Data Protection and Freedom of Information said on Monday.

Google’s Street View cars collected data from Wi-Fi networks such as SSIDs (service set identifiers), MAC addresses and personal payload data beginning in 2008, the company said in 2010. That admission prompted a German lawyer to request that the public prosecutor in Hamburg start a formal criminal investigation into Google’s practices.

However, in November 2012, 2 years and 9 months later, the prosecutor’s office decided not to pursue a criminal investigation into the matter because it was unable to find any violation of German criminal standards, it said at the time.

After that, Hamburg Data Protection Commissioner Johannes Caspar decided to reopen regulatory offense proceedings.

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From: http://www.pcworld.com/article/2036080/germans-fine-google-for-gathering-personal-data-with-street-view-cars.html#tk.rss_all

Lithuania Nabs Tax Dodgers Using … Google Street View

As soon as Google Maps Street View was rolled out in Lithuania earlier this year, tax authorities were ready. Sitting in the comfort of their own offices, inspectors used the free Internet program for a virtual cruise around the streets of some of the Baltic country’s big cities, uncovering dozens…

Source: FULL ARTICLE at Newser – Home

Travel Safety: Tips To Keep Yourself Safe While On The Road

By The Huffington Post News Editors

NEW YORK (AP) — Recent high-profile attacks on tourists in India, Brazil, Turkey and Mexico — including rapes — have raised questions about personal safety for overseas travel, especially for women. But frequent travelers and those who work in the industry say a few common-sense precautions can go a long way to ensuring personal safety.

For example, Fly.com vice president Warren Chang didn’t hang a “Do not disturb” sign on his hotel room door on a trip to Jordan, because he didn’t want to advertise his presence. Cindy Vanhoutte, who works for the vacation rental site HomeAway.com, always checks Google Street View to see what neighborhoods look like before renting there. And Pauline Frommer, co-publisher of Frommer Guidebooks, leaves her jewelry home and tries to dress according to “local norms” — recently wearing long, loose trousers in Morocco.

It’s also prudent to check the U.S. State Department website’s travel warnings, which track everything from crime to terrorism to natural disasters.

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Source: FULL ARTICLE at Huffington Post

Video: Google Street View Hyperlapse makes virtual travel magical

By Jeremy Korzeniewski

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We love Google Street View, both for its use as a real tool when mapping directions and for its amazing ability to function as an internet time waster. Turns out, though, that there is yet another awesome use for Google Street View that we had never considered ourselves.

Toronto-based design firm Teehan+Lax has created a process that allows users to build time-lapse animations using Google Street View imagery, and it’s calling the resulting videos Hyperlapses. If you don’t fancy the predetermined routes made by the firm – though we’re sure you will – you can create your own using their web interface.

Scroll down below to see what Street View animations look like in video form, and let us know if you create any of your own that you want to share.

Continue reading Google Street View Hyperlapse makes virtual travel magical

Google Street View Hyperlapse makes virtual travel magical originally appeared on Autoblog on Tue, 09 Apr 2013 20:00:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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Source: FULL ARTICLE at Autoblog

Video: Country band shoots guerrilla music video via Google Street View

By Zach Bowman

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Or at least that’s the claim. Grunnar and The Grizzly Boys have released a new video for their song Could Be Me, and the clip claims to have been made possible with the help of a video, the band opted for what looks to be a rolling concert performed from the back of three pickups in front of a Street View car. There are a couple of issues with that notion, though. First off, the Street View software automatically blurs faces, and everyone’s mug is clearly visible in the music video.

Second, we imagine that if Google was involved in this project from any angle, the tech company would promote it with a vengeance. More likely, the video was created using a GoPro to snap photos every three seconds. Still, that doesn’t make it any less hilarious. You can check it out below for yourself, or head over to iTunes to snap up the album. We won’t judge you.

Continue reading Country band shoots guerrilla music video via Google Street View

Country band shoots guerrilla music video via Google Street View originally appeared on Autoblog on Mon, 01 Apr 2013 20:01:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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Source: FULL ARTICLE at Autoblog

Google adds street views of Japan nuclear zone

Concrete rubble litters streets lined with shuttered shops and dark windows. A collapsed roof juts from the ground. A ship sits stranded on a stretch of dirt flattened when the tsunami roared across the coastline. There isn’t a person in sight.

Google Street View is giving the world a rare glimpse into one of Japan‘s eerie ghost towns, created when the March 2011 earthquake and tsunami sparked a nuclear disaster that has left the area uninhabitable.

The technology pieces together digital images captured by Google’s fleet of camera-equipped vehicles and allows viewers to take virtual tours of locations around the world, including faraway spots like the South Pole and fantastic landscapes like the Grand Canyon.

Now it is taking people inside Japan‘s nuclear no-go zone, to the city of Namie, whose 21,000 residents have been unable to return to live since they fled the radiation spewing from the Fukushima Dai-ichi nuclear power plant two years ago.

Koto Naganuma, 32, who lost her home in the tsunami, said some people find it too painful to see the places that were so familiar yet are now so out of reach.

She has only gone back once, a year ago, and for a few minutes.

“I’m looking forward to it. I’m excited I can take a look at those places that are so dear to me,” said Naganuma. “It would be hard, too. No one is going to be there.”

Namie Mayor Tamotsu Baba said memories came flooding back as he looked at the images shot by Google earlier this month.

He spotted an area where an autumn festival used to be held and another of an elementary school that was once packed with schoolchildren.

“Those of us in the older generation feel that we received this town from our forbearers, and we feel great pain that we cannot pass it down to our children,” he said in a post on his blog.

“We want this Street View imagery to become a permanent record of what happened to Namie-machi in the earthquake, tsunami and nuclear disaster.”

Street View was started in 2007, and now provides images from more than 3,000 …read more
Source: FULL ARTICLE at Fox US News

Apple Buys Its Way Indoors

By Evan Niu, CFA, CFA, The Motley Fool

Indoor Google Maps. Source: Google.

Inside, Google still has a lead over Apple. However, the search giant’s indoor initiatives date back to 2011, so Apple has more hope in catching up behind closed doors as opposed to under the sun.

The Mac maker becomes a map maker
Apple has confirmed the acquisition to both

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Even though Google is undeniably the mobile mapping king, Apple isn’t giving up so easily. That’s why Apple has acquired WifiSLAM, a small start-up specializing in indoor GPS, since the next frontier of mobile mapping is inside.

iOS users quickly snapped up the new version of Google Maps once it was released on Apple’s platform in December, just months after Apple made the controversial switch to its in-house offering. Google’s first-mover advantage is seemingly insurmountable since it has spent years aggregating mapping data that Apple simply doesn’t have yet.

On the outside, Google’s Street View offers unprecedented reach for an online mapping service. We’re talking about the search giant showing users the Great Barrier Reef or more recently, the Himalayas’ Mount Everest Base Camp. Meanwhile, Apple’s still working on getting down the basics before going mountain climbing.

WifiSLAM is a small company that uses ambient Wi-Fi signals to help pinpoint a smartphones indoor location within an approximate accuracy range of 2.5 meters. That information could potentially be used to eventually build step-by-step indoor navigation, proximity-based social networking, or product-level retail customer engagement.

With WifiSLAM, Apple is taking the mapping fight inside instead of outside.

Let’s take this inside
Turn-by-turn driving navigation was reportedly a major point of contention between Apple and Google that led to the switch. Indoor step-by-step navigation, on the other hand, is mostly an untapped frontier.

Google has already begun building out its data on indoor maps, including integrated floor plans in selected locations and a Google Maps Floor Plans service that’s still in beta testing. So far, buildings like airports and shopping malls, among others, have partnered with Google to make indoor maps available. Big G doesn’t want you running into any Minotaurs, after all.

Indoor Google Maps. Source: Google.

Inside, Google still has a lead over Apple. However, the search giant’s indoor initiatives date back to 2011, so Apple has more hope in catching up behind closed doors as opposed to under the sun.

The Mac maker becomes a map maker
Apple has confirmed the acquisition to both The Wall Street Journal and Reuters, without officially disclosing the price. The WSJ‘s sources peg the price tag at $20 million, which is little more than loose change for Apple.

WifiSLAM is now the fourth acquisition that Apple has picked up to build its mapping service. The Mac maker began acquiring map makers as early as 2009, starting with Placebase for an unknown amount. The company would then proceed to buy Poly9 in 2010 and C3 Technologies in 2011. These three purchases were stitched together to help launch Apple Maps.

Two months ago, there were also rumors that Apple was looking to acquire Waze, the crowd-sourced traffic and navigation service. The acquisition made sense, since Waze is also a small start-up with innovative technology that could be integrated into Apple’s offerings, and Waze is already one of Apple’s mapping data partners. …read more
Source: FULL ARTICLE at DailyFinance

Google Maps adds view from Mt. Everest

Google on Monday added views from some of the world’s tallest mountains to scenes woven into its popular online map service.

Google on Monday added views from some of the world’s tallest mountains to scenes woven into its popular online map service. Arm chair explorers were invited to take virtual adventures with members of Google’s Street View team to Aconcagua in South America; Kilimanjaro in Africa, Mount Elbrus in Europe, and Mt. Everest base camp in Nepal. “Whether you’re scoping out the mountain for your next big adventure or exploring it from the comfort and warmth of your home, we hope you enjoy these views from the top of the world,” Google adventurer Dan Fredinburg said in a blog post. “With Google Maps, you can instantly transport yourself to the top of these peaks and enjoy the sights without all the avalanches, rock slides, crevasses, and dangers from altitude and weather that mountaineers face.” The mountains climbed by the Street View team were among peaks referred to as the ‘Seven Summits;’ the highest peaks on the Earth’s continents. ‘Googlers’ who made the ascents took the pictures with tripod-mounted digital camera equipped with a fisheye lens to capture 360-degree views. Street View teams have cycled, driven and walked through cities and towns around the globe capturing images to add to online maps, letting people see what it might be like to stand at a spot they are curious about. Google has added images from a Nunavut community in the Canadian Arctic and a portion of the Amazon in Brazil.

See the map of Mount Everest on Google Maps

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Source: FULL ARTICLE at Phys.org

Google Street View Snaps Photos Of Man Getting Handjob (NSFW PHOTOS)

By The Huffington Post News Editors

The 15-lens cameras atop Google’s Street View cars have recorded a host of “interesting” moments in the nearly six years they’ve been snapping photos of the world’s streets: Paddington Bear, the naked Florida woman and, of course, “horse boy,” to name just a few.

But the images of the woman and man on Temperance Street in Manchester, U.K., engaged in some, errr, “manual stimulation” could take the not-safe-for-work cake.

WARNING: NSFW IMAGES BELOW

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Source: FULL ARTICLE at Huffington Post

Report: Notorious Ohio speed trap takes a hit as state laws change [w/video]

By Jeffrey N. Ross

Officer writing traffic ticket

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Anyone who’s ever lived in the Midwest or driven through Ohio probably knows that the Buckeye State is legendary for the strict speed traps along its highways. After March 22, motorists driving along Interstate 71 near Cleveland will have a little more breathing room. That’s because new state legislation will be shutting down eight of the mayor’s courts in Ohio, including one in Linndale, the state’s most notorious and controversial speed trap city. According to The Cleveland Leader, Linndale has but one exit and a quarter-mile section of the interstate inside its borders, yet “in 2011, Linndale police issued 4,000 traffic tickets, which accounted for over $400,000 in revenue.” That’s eight times as many citations per 100 citizens as any other place in Ohio. In fact, if you take a Google Street View look at I-71 as it runs through Linndale, you can see a police officer camped out in the shadows of a bridge.

The outgoing mayor’s courts system allow a mayor-appointed city employee – not a judge – to preside over traffic cases, and all of the ticket revenue would then be funneled to the city. All of this for a small town with fewer than 200 residents. With the new law, Linndale police will still be able to patrol the Interstate and ticket speeders, but the revenue from fines will then be split with other government entities.

Check out a video from a local news station below.

Continue reading Notorious Ohio speed trap takes a hit as state laws change [w/video]

Notorious Ohio speed trap takes a hit as state laws change [w/video] originally appeared on Autoblog on Tue, 26 Feb 2013 19:01:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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Source: FULL ARTICLE at Autoblog

This Week on the Wii U and 3DS eShop (2.14.13)

Happy Valentine’s Day, eShoppers! To celebrate, grab some virtual dollars and have a look at the latest additions to the 3DS and Wii U eShop. As always, each Thursday we’ll be bringing you a list of what’s available (retail and original software, DLC, demos and more), complete with prices and descriptions (care of Nintendo’s official site). For more information, jump over to your 3DS or Wii U!

Wii Street U (Free)

“With Wii Street U, powered by Google, you can step into Google Street View with an immersive experience that will make you feel like you’re actually there! View a 360 degree Google Maps Street View of locations all over the world using the Wii U GamePad controller’s motion controls. Jumping to a location is easy – just use the GamePad touch screen to type in an address or location and start exploring, or instantly travel to over 70 fascinating, hand-picked locations around the globe.”

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Source: FULL ARTICLE at IGN Video Games

Google Street View offers an armchair trek of Grand Canyon

Legions of young people have spent at least one summer packed next to their siblings in the back of a sweltering Ford Pinto during a multi-day tour to the Grand Canyon. Now, thanks to Google, this great American road trip destination is now online. The search giant has added to Street View on Google Maps more than 9500 panoramic images of the Grand Canyon, one of the great natural wonders of the world, covering more than 75 miles of trails and surrounding roads.

Now you can revisit the Bright Angel and South Kaibab trails from the comfort of your armchair and reminisce about your pilgrimage to Arizona during the summer of ’88. Ah, memories: the ennui from seeing nothing but open road for hours on end, eating at dingy gas station diners, and enduring regular cries of “are we there yet?” from your younger sister.

A team of Google Street View cartographers spent several months trekking through the Grand Canyon carrying 40-pound backpacks mounted with 15-lens, 360-degree cameras. The end result is a stunning collection of Street View panoramic images.  Let’s take a look at some of the highlights, and don’t worry; no donkeys were harmed during the Grand Canyon photo project.

The Colorado River

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Fantastic Panorama

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The South Kaibab Trail

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Now that Google, in its quest to map the entire world, has conquered the Grand Canyon, what’s next? The search giant is now working on bringing Cambridge Bay, Nunavut, in Canada’s Far North to Street View. The company is also developing more detailed regular maps of North Korea.

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Source: FULL ARTICLE at PCWorld

Virtually Hike the Grand Canyon with Google Street View

Can’t make it to the Grand Canyon? No worries. Google Street View will bring the Grand Canyon to you. In their continued effort to make the world seem like a smaller, more accessible place, Google is bringing the majesty of the Grand Canyon into the comfort of your own home with the help of Trekker, an Android-operated 15-lens camera mounted on a 40-pound backpack.

On their official blog, Google announced that users can now utilize Google Maps to explore over 75 miles of trails and exposed paths in the Grand Canyon, including the Bright Angel Trail and the South Kaibab Trail. With a few clicks of a mouse, armchair explorers can now appreciate the scenic views surrounding the Colorado River and virtually hike the rim of Meteor Crater without ever having to navigate the rocky terrain or unpredictable temperature fluctuations of one of the world’s Seven Natural Wonders.

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Source: FULL ARTICLE at IGN Tech

Google claims no donkey was harmed in Street View dustup

Google says no donkey was harmed in response to rampant rumors that one of Google’s Street View fleet flattened a mule on a dusty Botswana road. In a Google Lat Long blog post titled ” Never ass-ume” on Wednesday, Kei Kawai of Google Maps, tried to put the rumors to rest.

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“It looked to some that our car had been involved in an unseemly hit and run, leaving the humble beast stranded in the road,” wrote Kawai. “As our imagery below shows, the donkey was lying in the path – perhaps enjoying a dust bath – before moving safely aside as our car drove past.”

For the past several days Reddit, Twitter, and even some celebrities have studied a series of Street View images and convinced themselves Google is guilty of killing a donkey. Believe it or not, it wouldn’t have been the first time a Google Street View car was accused of being involved in a hit and run. In 2009 Street View images showed what looked like a deer getting hit by one of Google’s cars.

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Source: FULL ARTICLE at PCWorld