India bans Google Street View. Guess the reason?

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The Indian Government has voiced its concerns and objections regarding Google Street View being extended to the roads of India in the kind of 360-degree, panoramic and street-level images it has introduced across more than 65 countries, and seven million miles. So far, Street View in India has only mapped major landmarks and tourist attractions such as the Taj Mahal in Agra and the Gateway of India in Mumbai, rather than the street-level detail seen in cities in the UK or the US.

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“The main concern was security of sensitive defence installations. The Defence Ministry said it was not possible to monitor the service once it was launched and it would be detrimental to national security,” a senior government official told Indian newspaper The Hindu.

The faces, licence plates and other sensitive information are always blurred, but the security of India is still spectacle. A similar backlash was returned in Europe, including in the UK, Czech Republic and Germany, where privacy-minded citizens demanded photos of their homes be blurred as well. The city of Hamburg’s data protection authority fined Google $189,225 in 2013. European authorities also ruled that citizens whose homes were being photographed by Google’s bikes and cars had to be notified first.

As for India, this defensiveness comes in wake of the terrorist attacks in Mumbai and more recently, on the Pathankot military airbase in January. Investigators believe the attackers were familiar with the layout of the airbase from Google Maps.

ince its launch, Google has mapped some of the world’s greatest archaeological treasures from the Pyramids of Giza to the ancient city of Petra, as well as natural wonders like the Galapagos Islands and the underwater fauna off Cook Island, to raise awareness of conservation efforts. Most recently, Street View mapped the streets and sights of Rio de Janeiro’s Olympic stadia before Rio 2016.

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Both Google and the Indian Government to having officially given the verdict. The service may be affected by India’s Geospatial Information Regulation Bill, which is yet to be passed.

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Author: Technology and Beyond

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