Remember the first time you zoomed in on Google maps and realized that you could see actual photos of your street? When you discovered that you could take a virtual stroll down pretty much any road in the world, or check out the street in front of that new apartment you just spotted an ad for?
While all of the images taken by Google’s magical multi-direction photo car were technically taken on public property, there have been numerous complaints over “invasions of privacy” as, in the process of snapping the world’s streets, many ordinary people going about their day - be it gardening, walking the dog or leaving a sex shop with an armful of porn mags - were caught on camera and immortalized forever for the entire world to see.
Naturally, Google took steps towards protecting the privacy of the unlucky few caught in embarrassing situations and blurred out the faces of those who happened to be out and about, so it’s not unusual to see shots of busy cities like Tokyo populated by people who look like they could be in a Japanese Adult Movie.
But when they go so far as to blur out KFC’s Colonel Sanders’ face, it just looks weird.
Despite the man himself having been dead for more than 30 years, the cream-suited plastic effigy of the king of herbs and spices remains standing outside many branches of KFC. And each one’s face, it would seem, has been blurred out by Google’s clever computers.
A quick check on Google Maps shows that the Colonel’s face has been wiped clean from pretty much every location’s photo. Not even smaller branches like the one in my own town managed to evade Google’s face-recognition machines.
But with the number of complaints Google received when Street View was first unveiled, perhaps this mass of blurry blobs is testament to the technological advances the company’s face-recognition software has made. Better that the computers be extremely liberal with their privacy pen than to have one's face appear next to an establishment of questionable nature.
Source: IT Media
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8 Comments
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Probie
Amazingly shocking news: Face recognition software recognizes faces and blurs them out. This article is going to win the Pulitzer prize for it's amazing content and for being so well written.
I have no idea what is trying to be said here, but it's just silly.
Gurukun
Are faces on statues and posters blurred out too?
basroil
GurukunOct. 12, 2012 - 09:12AM JST
Usually, yes. Teddy bears and other caricatures aren't safe either.
Another sign of Japanese laws on "privacy" in public places is out of control. They should make it more like the US, if you can see it from the street (or other area described as a public place), you have no say in the photos taken. Japan should not protect stupid people doing stupid things like urinating in their front lawn (yes, it has happened in europe) or having an affair in public (happened in Tokyo)
Gurukun
basroil, really? Did not know that since I have never messed with Google Maps. Thanks for the info!
basroil
GurukunOct. 12, 2012 - 02:37PM JST
http://www.chinapost.com.tw/taiwan/national/national-news/2011/08/07/312557/Google-Maps.htm
More stuff like this all over the net.
JohnBecker
Basroil, it sounds as though this is a decision by Google applied universally, not a restriction imposed by Japan.
basroil
JohnBeckerOct. 13, 2012 - 01:21AM JST
The choice to use vans a full meter lower than standard was at the request of Japanese lawmakers. Face/car blurring was at the request of the Canadians. In Japan though, google ended up deleting EVERYTHING and reshooting, then add a filter to delete nameplates on Japanese houses and improve face recognition.
JonathanJo
In the Japanese Adult Movies I've seen, it not the faces that get pixelated... more the other bits.