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Italy orders Google to mark Street View cars: report

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MILAN | Sat Oct 23, 2010 8:08am EDT

MILAN (Reuters) - Italy's privacy regulator has told Google Inc it will have to make sure its "Street View" photo-collecting cars are clearly marked and their itinerary is publicized, a daily newspaper reported on Saturday.

Under the regulator's decision, Google has to publish three days in advance on its website, in local newspapers and on radio in which locality, including which area of a large city, the cars will be operating, La Stampa said.

"There has been strong alarm and also hostility in a lot of European countries against Google taking photos. We have received protests even from local administrations," Privacy Authority President Francesco Pizzetti was quoted as saying.

In September, the authority ordered a block on Google processing "payload data" collected by the cars from wi-fi radio networks after launching an investigation in May.

In a statement provided by a spokeswoman, Google did not confirm the details of the privacy regulator's decision but said it was in constant contact with the authority about protecting personal data and inform citizens in numerous ways about its cars' trips.

The authority could not be reached immediately for comment.

On Friday, Google admitted for the first time the Street View cars had accidentally collected more personal data than previously disclosed.

(Writing by Nigel Tutt; editing by Patrick Graham)

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Comments (5)
strangename wrote:
While publishing the itinerary might help if you don’t want those empty garbage bins immortalized, the Street View vehicles with their roof-mounted panoramic camera arrays cannot be mistaken for anything else and do not need identification.

Oct 23, 2010 10:44am EDT  --  Report as abuse
aelsea wrote:
Encrypt your WiFi router and the problem disappears. Perhaps all WiFi routers should be sold with encryption enabled by default.

Most people don’t leave their car keys in their parked cars or their front doors unlocked and standing open.

Consumers have got to start treating electronic communication with the respect that it deserves rather than some kind of magic.

The Attorney’s General are just looking for the usual “sound bite” political exposure by protecting a bunch of naive consumers from their own carelessness.

Has the “nanny state” expanded from the USA to the entire world?

Oct 23, 2010 12:28pm EDT  --  Report as abuse
Bidensux wrote:
No doubt about it. The vehicles are unmistakable with the Eiffel Tower looking contraption on the roof. Unless of course that is the new trend in Italy. If you ask me, it’s kind of embarrassing to actually give an order like that and have it publicly viewed.

Oct 23, 2010 12:32pm EDT  --  Report as abuse
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