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Road trip! To photograph the entire country.

German Protesters

by MG Siegler on Mar 29, 2010

There’s never a shortage of controversy surrounding Google Street View. Even if you think the service is useful and/or cool to look at, you have to admit there’s something creepy about Google cars driving around countries collecting these data with cameras mounted on the roof. And it appears that someone in Germany had just about enough of that.

Police are investigating an incident in Oldenburg, Germany where a parked Google Street View car was vandalized overnight (in German – rough English translation). Apparently, the perpetrator let the air out of the car’s tires and also cut a wire that hooks the roof-mounted camera up with the inside of the car. It seems that nothing was stolen from the car, and none of the equipment on the outside was even taken. So it would seem this is clearly just a sign of protest against Google.

And actually, the person who did the act was nice enough to leave a note on the windshield of the car letting the driver know that the air was let out of the tires (not to mention that they only let the air out, rather than slashing them). Those techie protestors are quite considerate. Well, at least more considerate than Google protestors.

Google Prius takes to the track at the Mazda Raceway Laguna Seca. Yet not a surprise, it is in last place.

Fun stuff caught by the Google Car.

Google Car takes photo of Google Car

The Google Street View Car may have captured an image of your face, house, car, or license plate and displayed it for everyone and their mother to see. This may raise your privacy concerns or maybe you were just having a bad hair day. But never fear, you can have the intrusive image blurred at no cost – other than the annoyance of notifying Google.

Google (sort of) respects your privacy, and usually blurs identifying personal details through some mindless high tech software. But you can also ask Google to have images of you, your children, cars or houses completely removed from the Google Street View even if the images have already been blurred.

This is how we do it:

  1. First go to the Google Street View Map image that is bothering you.
  2. Zoom it in totally to the max.
  3. Click on the “Report a Problem” link in the bottom left  corner of the concerned map screen.
  4. With your mouse click on the red box and drag it over the part of the image that is bugging you.
  5. Fill in the captcha and click submit.

Help us locate the Google Street View Car.

Hello world,

I’m trying to start a grassroot viral campaign to locate the Google Street View Car at all times. Please spread the word and tell your friends. If enough people know about this experiment we will be able to predict and sometimes know the exact location of the Google Street View Car’s cameras.

But Why?

1. So you and I can get our pictures taken inside of Google Maps Street View. This will make us infamous amongst our peers and undoubtedly really annoy Google.

2. So people who want to protect their privacy can shield themselves from the prying eyes of Google.

If you want to know when the Google Street View Car will be rolling down your street then follow us on Twitter or Facebook.

If you see the GSVC please send us a tweet right away to @streetviewcar .

This is what I’m talking about…

Tipped off by friends, two Norwegian pranksters dressed as scuba divers chased after a Google Street View car in Norway.

The pair were spotted on Street View this week after Google updated its Maps for Norway recently. The pranksters can be seen sitting on chairs dressed in scuba gear as the car passes and then chasing after the car with pitchforks.

Norwegian news outlet Oslo daily Aftenposten tracked down the pair who revealed the stunt. “This was not done to hurt anyone. It was all an innocent joke,” stated prankster Borre Erstad. To see the pranksters on Google Street View, click here.

Viking Samurais of Pittsburgh

Someone using Google’s Street View map may be surprised when looking down Pittsburgh’s Sampsonia Way.

In May, artists Ben Kinsley and Robin Hewlett staged outlandish scenes, including a 17th century sword fight, and an escape from a building using knotted sheets, to be captured when a Google car equipped with cameras was sent down Sampsonia Way.

The artists wanted to explore the boundaries between virtual and real worlds.

How to promote yourself on google maps

We’ve heard of people getting upset when their picture shows up on Google Street View (the street-level picture you can zoom into from Google Maps). For this reason, Google blurs out people’s faces for privacy. Others have protested Google coming down their street to photograph their house (cough, Paul McCartney). But can Google Street View also be used as a marketing vehicle?

Nate Heagy thinks so. He went to great lengths to follow a Google Street View vehicle and anticipate its movements so that he could set up a sign in its path and start playing a guitar so that he could promote his band, Fear Salesman. Well, he is now on Google Street View. Heagy explains how he executed his bold plan:

Last spring, . . . I hatched a plan to promote my indie band. After making a sign and keeping it in the trunk of my car for about a month I finally chanced across the google street view car. Then I had to follow it until I figured out its pattern, then get ahead of it with time to set up.

There is only one problem. His picture was taken in the middle of nowhere. Not only is it in Saskatoon, Saskatchewan (which is in Canada, for all you geography majors out there). It is on a random residential street in Saskatoon that maybe five people will ever look up. Until now, I guess. Damn you, Heagy!How

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