| | |
Eek! Organization Claims Pedophiles Could Use Google Street View to Find Victims
Please support our Pay-Per-Click Advertising advertiser: Get a Free Web Marketing Analysis!
The group Stop Internet Predators, claiming that the Street View 360-degree technology can be used by pedophiles to help stalk their victims, is recommending that municipalities "[b]an Street View from your neighborhoods until it is safeguarded to ensure children's safety and privacy."
How Google is supposed to do that, the organization doesn't say.
"Street View could make it simple, for example, for anyone to map the most likely route your child walks to school, calculate the distance between your front door and the school bus stop, view images of the different entrances to community parks, and even find the location of your families’ bedroom windows," the organization's website warns.
The technology, used in Google Maps, is thus far available in about 17 cities. Similar technologies are used products from other vendors, such as Microsoft, but Google's is for some reason the one primarily targeted.
Newspapers in Pittsburgh, St. Louis, and Manchester, N.H., have run articles on the group -- most often to derision by readers.
"Why does this help child predators?" said 'Sabrina' from St. Louis. "If they live in the same town, they are likely well aware children play in parks. It they don’t live in the same town, they can get the same location information for parks that is already available in online maps."
Or paper maps, even. Like the kinds that some cities actually give out.
Google spokespeople are typically also quoted in the articles, noting that the company blurs faces and will remove photographs on request, and also that the information is no different from what could be captured on camera by someone in a car or on foot along city streets.
In fact, some cities -- most of them, in my experience -- actually have signs alerting potential predators to upcoming schools and parks. Eek!
The executive director of the organization, Stacie Rumenap, admitted in several articles that no children have been harmed through the tool, but, according to a letter the organization suggests sending to municipal officials, "our children’s safety is our number one priority and we cannot allow to [sic] be compromised."
How Google is supposed to do that, the organization doesn't say.
"Street View could make it simple, for example, for anyone to map the most likely route your child walks to school, calculate the distance between your front door and the school bus stop, view images of the different entrances to community parks, and even find the location of your families’ bedroom windows," the organization's website warns.
The technology, used in Google Maps, is thus far available in about 17 cities. Similar technologies are used products from other vendors, such as Microsoft, but Google's is for some reason the one primarily targeted.
Newspapers in Pittsburgh, St. Louis, and Manchester, N.H., have run articles on the group -- most often to derision by readers.
"Why does this help child predators?" said 'Sabrina' from St. Louis. "If they live in the same town, they are likely well aware children play in parks. It they don’t live in the same town, they can get the same location information for parks that is already available in online maps."
Or paper maps, even. Like the kinds that some cities actually give out.
Google spokespeople are typically also quoted in the articles, noting that the company blurs faces and will remove photographs on request, and also that the information is no different from what could be captured on camera by someone in a car or on foot along city streets.
In fact, some cities -- most of them, in my experience -- actually have signs alerting potential predators to upcoming schools and parks. Eek!
The executive director of the organization, Stacie Rumenap, admitted in several articles that no children have been harmed through the tool, but, according to a letter the organization suggests sending to municipal officials, "our children’s safety is our number one priority and we cannot allow to [sic] be compromised."
0
•
•
•
•
> "our children’s safety is our number one priority and we cannot allow to [sic] be compromised."
Definitely. No one should be allowed to be around children nor go anywhere they might encounter or observe children. People can't be trusted around children - not even other children.
Shutting down Google Street view is not nearly enough. Everyone should be permanently blinded and chained a safe distance apart. Think of the the children!
Definitely. No one should be allowed to be around children nor go anywhere they might encounter or observe children. People can't be trusted around children - not even other children.
Shutting down Google Street view is not nearly enough. Everyone should be permanently blinded and chained a safe distance apart. Think of the the children!
Similar Threads
- Streetread: Google Reader meets Wall Street (Website Reviews)
- News Story: Software identifies potential pedophiles online (Graphics and Multimedia)
- News Story: Google is a virus, claims Microsoft (Network Security)
| Thread Tools | Search this Thread |
adsense advertising amazon analytics android api apple bing blackberry blogging broadband browser business cellphone censorship china chrome cloudcomputing copyright data development doubleclick earnings email engine europe facebook firefox g1 gis gmail google googleadwords googledocs googleearth googlemaps government hacker hacking hp ibm icahn internet iphone law legal linux malware mapping maps marketing media microsoft mobile mozilla netbooks networking news office opensource os pagerank politics porn privacy programming publishing research rss rural saas search searchengine security seo sex social socialmedia socialnetwork socialnetworking software statistics streetview t-mobile technologystocks twitter uk verizon viacom video vista wave web wifi wikipedia windows wolframalpha yahoo yahoo! youtube




