Will Google's "street views" invite lawsuits?

Don’t bother running. You can’t hide from Google’s cameras.

The Boston Globe is jazzed about Google Maps’ new “street view” feature (see clip at the end of this post).

But I’m thinking of the chilling effect–knowing that your picture, taken on the street and posted to Google Maps, will link your identity with the locations you happen to be passing through.

I think of all the strip joints, porno shops, people pass as they walk and cycle around San Francisco, New York and Boston. (Boston street views are not yet available.)

Google’s street views sends a clear message: If value your reputation (or “if you’ve got nothing to hide,” as some “sheeple” say), you will now have to watch where you are seen.

It is also conceivable that Google’s unwitting  subjects (considering that Google is using their images for profit), will flood the internet giant with lawsuits. Parents of children caught up in the dragnet, clergy and officials snapped in their cities’ red light districts, where they might be working legitimately–all might find cause to bring action against Google.

Meanwhile, be on the lookout for this van (immediately below), which is reportedly carrying the cameramen for Google…

And here’s a quick shot of my old First Avenue digs in Manhattan, courtesy of the new Google feature:

firstave.jpg

clipped from www.boston.com
Google Maps’s new “Street View” feature, announced earlier this week, is pretty amazing. The feature, which uses vehicle-cameras to take 360-degree street level views, allows users to virtually navigate the only five American cities that matter: New York, Las Vegas, Denver, Miami, and San Francisco.

Leave "Left Behind" behind, says blogger

Bleak: New York is a battleground for Christian soldiers

“Left Behind: Eternal Forces,” the apocalypse-themed video game I covered in my Boston Globe column last year, is an ungodly mess, according to Extreme Politics blogger Henry Garfield.

“The game is riddled with bugs, making it difficult to get through a compete mission without the whole thing crashing,” Garfield writes. “Oh well, I guess I’ll have to live out my fantasies of satanic jihad elsewhere for the time being.”

Even so, like Garfield, I find the “blowing away nonbelievers” concept compelling.

Check out the link and excerpt, below.

clipped from extremepolitics.blogspot.com
Unfortunately according to both published reviews and Amazon’s feedback page, the game fails to live up to its initial promise. There in fact appears to be little killing involved, as the players spend most of their time trying to peacefully convert citizens to their line of thinking. The game play is also (as might be expected) crude and unimaginative, with some reviewers comparing it unfavorably to freeware games.