Swiss privacy watchdog to sue Google Street View
By FRANK JORDANS
GENEVA (AP) - Google Inc.'s unstoppable drive to map and
photograph the world has run into an immovable object -
Switzerland's strict tradition of personal privacy.
The country's privacy watchdog announced Friday that he plans to
haul the search engine company before a federal court to force it
to make changes to its Street View application.
Google criticized the decision and said it would defend itself
in the case.
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The service allows people to view street-level pictures over the
Internet and already has been criticized in several European
countries for allowing individuals to be identified without their
knowledge or consent - potentially exposing embarrassing facts
about their private lives to the world.
Switzerland's federal data protection commissioner wants Google
to ensure that all faces and car plates are blurred, remove
pictures of enclosed areas such as walled gardens and private
streets, and declare at least one week in advance which town and
cities it plans to photograph and post online.
``Numerous faces and vehicle number plates are not made
sufficiently unrecognizable from the point of view of data
protection, especially where the persons concerned are shown in
sensitive locations, e.g. outside hospitals, prisons or schools,''
the commissioner, Hanspeter Thuer, said in a statement.
``The height from which the camera on top of the Google vehicle
films is also problematic,'' he said. ``It provides a view over
fences, hedges and walls, with the result that people see more on
Street View than can been seen by a normal passer-by in the
street.''
Thuer requested in August that Google take ``various measures to
protect personal privacy in its Street View online service.''
``Google for the most part declined to comply with the
requests,'' the commissioner said, prompting him to take the matter
to Switzerland's Federal Administrative Tribunal.
Google said in a statement that it was disappointed by the move.
The California-based company believes Street View is legal and
will ``vigorously contest'' the case, said Google's global privacy
counsel Peter Fleischer.
While the case may take months to wind its way through
Switzerland's legal system, it could have an immediate impact on
the availability of the Street View service in the country.
Thuer has asked the tribunal to require Google to remove all
pictures taken in Switzerland and to cease taking any more pictures
in the country until a ruling is made.
While Switzerland has long been famous for its reserve and
privacy - best illustrated by its strict banking secrecy laws -
other countries also have taken a dim view of Street View since its
launch in 2007.
In July, Greek officials rejected a bid to photograph the
nation's streets until more privacy safeguards are provided. In
April, residents of one English village formed a human chain to
stop a camera van, and in Japan the company agreed to reshoot views
taken by a camera high enough to peer over fences.
Google also caved in to German demands to erase the raw footage
of faces, house numbers, license plates and individuals who have
told authorities they do not want their information used in the
service.
11/13/09 06:49
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