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Google, Web

Google Street View: The Movie, A Buddy Comedy

Google Street View: The Movie, A Buddy Comedy
Google has photographed nearly every street in America, and it's working on expanding Street View to the rest of the planet. Ever wonder how Google put together this impressive and intrusive feature for Maps? Well College Humor would like to imagine it started with two pasty, humanoid blobs hired by Google to take a road trip across the entire country.

Minus the Gumby like appearance (and bizarrely slow beard growth) of the characters, we hope that if Google had actually tossed two complete strangers in a car together and asked them to take the world's longest road trip and photograph every single street, they would have been smart enough to turn it into a reality show. Fox or ABC would gobble that crap up.

The highlight for us? When Evan cries and pleads to stop as Mike drives past his mother on the street. Mike's one word reply: "Google..." Watch the video below. [From: College Humor]

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Google, Web

Philip Garrido Kidnapping Case Displays the Reach of Google

Philip Garrido Case Displays the Reach of Google
Philip Garrido is, to put it mildly, a creepy dude. (We prefer to describe him as a tad 'rapey' looking). Everything surrounding the case of the confessed kidnapper, rapist, and now suspected serial killer is unsettling. The case gets truly bizarre and horrifying when you start looking at all of the online elements.

The most immediately disturbing, and most revealing, is Garrido's blog -- Voices Revealed. The Blogspot site, which he penned using the screen name themanwhospokewithhismind, is filled with religious ramblings, claims of controlling sound with his mind, and vague claims of being cured of a "problem," which may be a reference to pedophilia.

While the blog does offer rare and disturbing insight into the mind of the criminally insane, it contains little evidence of the true nature of Garrido's depravity. For even more horrifying direct imagery, you can turn to Google. The tent and tool shed compound that Garrido built in his backyard, where he is alleged to have held his victims, is clearly visible in the satellite imagery on Google Maps.

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Google, Web

Google Street View Sees the Light... in Brooklyn

Google Street View Sees the Light
Google Street View is well known for some of the crazy things picked up by its roving band of car-mounted cameras. There are mundane, if disturbing, sights -- like these shots of Bambi getting run down -- and more surreal images of lasers, ghosts, and alien invasions. But none of those is quite as otherworldly as the mysterious light in the heart of Brooklyn, New York.

The bright light erupting from the scenery may just be the result of a very dramatic lens flare and the setting sun, but that hasn't stopped people on the Internet from speculating that the Googlemobile can hit warp speed and has discovered a passage to Heaven, or some sort of "hellgate." One user pointed out: "It's Brooklyn. Trust me that that [sic] isn't Heaven."

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Web

Colonel Sanders' Face Blurred By Google Street View on All KFCs

It seems Google Street View's facial recognition technology may actually work better than we thought.

Apparently, the iconic face of Colonel Sanders has been blurred on every Kentucky Fried Chicken location. This gives Google some much-needed ammunition in the fight against those who believe the service invades individuals' privacy. Complaints directed toward Street View technology have been passionate, so we're sure a high profile success story like this sits well with top Google brass.

According to the Daily Telegraph, Google says it's choosing to blur Sanders' face because he is 'a real person'. Sanders, of course, died in December 1980. We're happy to see that Google is taking the privacy of individuals seriously, but there is still room for improvement. Privacy advocates contend that some individuals are still recognizable. Well, now Google can simply point to Colonel's face and say, "See...it works!" [From: Daily Telegraph]

Google, Web

Husband Caught Cheating by Google Street View, Lawyer Says


Since its inception, Google Street View, which gives viewers a 360-degree, street-level view of certain desired locations, has provided numerous, disturbing images of people caught in the middle of illegal and illicit activities. According to The Sun, an English woman recently learned of her husband's infidelity while using the Google application, noticing his Range Rover (identifiable thanks to its custom rims) parked outside of a female friend's house.

While the image has not been identified to the public, and neither spouse has commented, attorney Mark Stephens confirmed the story to The Sun. He also said that the phenomenon is not uncommon: "I was talking about the Range Rover case when another divorce lawyer came up to say his firm was dealing with the same sort of thing." Such tales are not surprising, considering the rising number of public complaints that the service is an invasion of privacy. Google, for its part, does blur faces in the images of some locales, but that comes as no relief to people, like the Range Rover owner, who are caught in the act by different measures.

As Street View becomes a global Neighborhood Watch, people must take care to protect their privacy, especially if they're doing something which might be shameful or embarrassing. Fortunately, there are precautionary measures you can take to ensure that your identity remains unknown to StreetView voyeurs. In the interest of alleviating concerns about diminishing free will and decreased privacy, may we suggest this device to help conceal your private activities. [From: The Sun Via: Valleywag]

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Google Punks Web With Victorian Ghost Hoax on Street View

We've seen all sorts of strange and interesting things on Google StreetView, from X to Y. But when the Telegraph reported that StreetView spied this unexplained, ghostly pedestrian decked out in Victorian-era clothing, people began to wonder if there was something paranormal afoot. After all, the Cardiff, Wales docklands where the woman was spotted has a long history of murders and other mysteries. As it turns out, the Telegraph's Sarah Knapton may have let her imagination run away a bit. Apparently, the apparition is none other than Mary Poppins, making this just one in a new batch of StreetView pranks organized by Google to promote its 360-degree street-mapping service.

If you look around carefully, you can find Paddington Bear waving on London's Portobello Road, Sherlock Holmes loosed in Oxford, and the famous Beefeater doing a little shopping at a London department store. Perhaps the Google folks got the inspiration for such shenanigans from Ben Kinsley and Robin Hewlett, two Pittsburgh-based artists who staged a series of outlandish scenes for the passing StreetView team back in May, 2008.

We're glad that Google has a sense of humor, since StreetView has been highly criticized as an invasion of privacy. Maybe the company is hoping that a few good-natured pranks will prove its 'non-evilness' to the service's paranoid detractors.

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Google

British Man Caught Puking on Google StreetView

Yes, it's happened before, but that doesn't mean seeing drunken escapades caught on Google StreetView is any less funny. The latest terrific image comes to us from London, where a man can be seen yakking all over a sidewalk.

As Gizmodo points out, by way of some readers, the man wearing the antlers signifies that this little incident occurred during a stag party, otherwise known as a bachelor party to us Yanks. Unfortunately, Google removed the image from the map for unknown, lame reasons. Considering some of the shenanigans we've seen -- but never been a part of, honest -- we wish Google would do its StreetView-picture-taking on New Year's or St. Patrick's Day. Let's keep the good times going! [From: GoogleStreetView, via Gizmodo]

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Computers, Google

Did Google Street View Kill This Deer?



We've seen tons of interesting and hilarious stuff on Google Street View, but this made us a little sad. See the cute little deer skipping across the road above? Move forward two frames and turn around (check out the embedded map after the break) -- poor guy never had a chance.

If you really want to tug at your heart strings skip forward one frame and point the camera down...

The images of Five Points Rd. end shortly thereafter, leading us to believe at least that the Googlemobile pulled over and the drivers did what they could to clean up after their unfortunate mess. [Thanks: Mike and Sarah Booz for sending this in]



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Computers, Google

Google Doubles Street View Coverage

Oh Street View, how we love reporting on your stories. Whether you're violating peoples' privacy, making neighborhood shame international, or acting as a stage for performance art, you've always been entertaining. But useful? That question we're not so sure of, but however useful it may have been before, the aerial satellite image service is now twice-so, with Google having just doubled the amount of coverage the service covers in the nation (and abroad).

As you can see in the picture above, the expanse of low-res photography has grown hugely since the site launched. Google released a number of new streets yesterday, including some for the first time in Maine, West Virginia, North Dakota, and South Dakota. That should make some virtual sight-seeing a little easier, but is this service actually useful? How many of you have actually used the street view to help you find out where you're going, or has its availability made you more likely to visit Google Maps? As much as we think Street View is cool, we're just not sure there's really a point to it. [From: Official Google Blog, via Mashable]

iPhone

New iPhone Software to Include Google Street View, Mass-Transit Directions


The T-Mobile G1's Google Maps Street View implementation is one of the slickest features of the first Android phone, but it looks like Apple's going to keep feature parity -- the latest builds of iPhone OS 2.2 seeded to developers have Street View, as well as the ability to give mass transit directions. That's pretty useful for cityfolk like us -- and we're also stoked that line-in audio is now supported in the SDK, giving devs the ability to create voice recorders and other interesting audio apps. Of course, there's no word on when 2.2 will actually arrive, but until then we suppose we'll live with regular, non-data-augmented streets. Lots of screenshots of the new features at the read link.

[Via MacRumors]

Computers, Google

Google Street View Starts Blurring Faces

Google Street View Starts Blurring Faces

Google's Street View has been a source of amusement for some, ire for others, and a concern for privacy advocates. Google is finally starting to conceal the identity of some of the hapless victims of its panoramic photo-taking van. The company has started implementing a new facial recognition tool that will automatically blur the faces of people captured by its Street View cameras.

The technology isn't perfect -- a quick look around Manhattan (the only city to see any blurring yet) reveals some still identifiable faces, and some spots have been blurred that clearly aren't people. Google has been working on the technology for the last year, likely in preparation for a global expansion of Street View. These up-close and potentially embarrassing images may run into tougher legal and cultural opposition on other parts of the globe. [Source: USA Today]

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