The EU's top data protection supervisor said Thursday that
Google Inc.'s "Street View" map and imaging feature
could pose privacy problems if it launches in Europe.
Peter Hustinx said the Internet map service program would
have to comply with European privacy laws as it captures and
posts street- level photos.
"I would encourage Google to think about how to do this,"
Hustinx told reporters. "Making pictures on the street
is in many cases not a problem, but making pictures everywhere
is certainly going to create some problems. I'm quite sure
they are aware of this."
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Responding to privacy concerns in the United States, Google
has said it will automatically blur faces of people captured
in photos taken for the program. The service was not the first
to augment online maps with photos, but the detail and breadth
of images on the site surprised and unsettled many users when
it launched last year.
Google spokesman Larry Yu said Google hopes to head off legal
or cultural objections that might emerge as Street View expands
into other countries.
An EU report last month on search engines recommended they
change their practices to meet European data retention and
privacy rules.
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