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Author: gb6724gb6724 Date: Sep 29, 2007 07:22
What would you do if you found a Peeping Tom into your home's window?
You call the police.
If somebody is illegally peeping into windows of people's homes he is
arrested.
Google's Streetview software now like Orwell watches all streets and
allows people to peek into people's home windows. Google says people
see what they would if they would go to those streets.
Imagine in small European towns where a man is caught exiting a strip
club.
To have cameras in the streets is a sign of the worst dictatorships,
other than that millions of criminal charges arise for psychotic
tendencies to watch. Google is watching you and the world is worried.
Other major crimes of theft for Google are their Library project where
they copied 15 million international books from libraries for profit
and without checking for copyright, but those books have owners with
copyrights that prevent any profiting from the duplicates and material
of those books. 15 million illegal copies is mass piracy, but those
books also represent arts and humanities, and stealing that hits on
crimes against humanity.
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Author: gb6724gb6724 Date: Sep 29, 2007 10:18
On Sep 29, 8:22 am, "gb6...@ yahoo.com" yahoo.com> wrote:
> What would you do if you found a Peeping Tom into your home's window?
> You call the police.
>
> If somebody is illegally peeping into windows of people's homes he is
> arrested.
>
> Google's Streetview software now like Orwell watches all streets and
> allows people to peek into people's home windows. Google says people
> see what they would if they would go to those streets.
>
> Imagine in small European towns where a man is caught exiting a strip
> club.
>
> To have cameras in the streets is a sign of the worst dictatorships,
> other than that millions of criminal charges arise for psychotic
> tendencies to watch. Google is watching you and the world is worried.
>
> Other major crimes of theft for Google are their Library project where
> they copied 15 million international books from libraries for profit ...
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Author: Dave L. RenfroDave L. Renfro Date: Sep 30, 2007 11:37
gb6...@ yahoo.com" yahoo.com> wrote (in part):
> Google's Streetview software now like Orwell watches
> all streets and allows people to peek into people's
> home windows. Google says people see what they
> would if they would go to those streets.
I didn't know much about this so I googled for the
site. As far as I can tell, it's only in 9 locations
in the U.S. (and all but 2 are in coastal areas) and
nowhere outside the U.S. I'd hardly say this is
"all streets", or even more than a very extremely tiny
fraction of all streets (even in the U.S.). And even
if it were all streets in the U.S., if the cameras
are only confined to street locations, no one is
going to be able to see into your home window unless
your house is right up on the street (or pretty close,
with a very short driveway).
Dave L. Renfro
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Author: MarshallMarshall Date: Sep 30, 2007 11:49
On Sep 30, 11:37 am, "Dave L. Renfro" cmich.edu> wrote:
>
> I didn't know much about this so I googled for the
> site. As far as I can tell, it's only in 9 locations
> in the U.S. (and all but 2 are in coastal areas) and
> nowhere outside the U.S. I'd hardly say this is
> "all streets", or even more than a very extremely tiny
> fraction of all streets (even in the U.S.). And even
> if it were all streets in the U.S., if the cameras
> are only confined to street locations, no one is
> going to be able to see into your home window unless
> your house is right up on the street (or pretty close,
> with a very short driveway).
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Author: gb6724gb6724 Date: Sep 30, 2007 20:07
On Sep 30, 12:37 pm, "Dave L. Renfro" cmich.edu> wrote:
> gb6...@ yahoo.com" yahoo.com> wrote (in part):
>
>> Google's Streetview software now like Orwell watches
>> all streets and allows people to peek into people's
>> home windows. Google says people see what they
>> would if they would go to those streets.
>
> I didn't know much about this so I googled for the
> site. As far as I can tell, it's only in 9 locations
> in the U.S. (and all but 2 are in coastal areas) and
> nowhere outside the U.S. I'd hardly say this is
> "all streets", or even more than a very extremely tiny
> fraction of all streets (even in the U.S.). And even
> if it were all streets in the U.S., if the cameras
> are only confined to street locations, no one is
> going to be able to see into your home window unless
> your house is right up on the street (or pretty close,
> with a very short driveway).
> ...
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Author: ProginoskesProginoskes Date: Sep 30, 2007 21:57
On Sep 30, 8:07 pm, "gb6...@ yahoo.com" yahoo.com> wrote:
> On Sep 30, 12:37 pm, "Dave L. Renfro" cmich.edu> wrote:
>
>
>
>> gb6...@ yahoo.com" yahoo.com> wrote (in part):
>
>>> Google's Streetview software now like Orwell watches
>>> all streets and allows people to peek into people's
>>> home windows. Google says people see what they
>>> would if they would go to those streets.
>
>> I didn't know much about this so I googled for the
>> site. As far as I can tell, it's only in 9 locations
>> in the U.S. (and all but 2 are in coastal areas) and
>> nowhere outside the U.S. I'd hardly say this is
>> "all streets", or even more than a very extremely tiny
>> fraction of all streets (even in the U.S.). And even
>> if it were all streets in the U.S., if the cameras
>> are only confined to street locations, no one is ...
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Author: quasiquasi Date: Oct 1, 2007 00:45
On Mon, 01 Oct 2007 04:57:01 -0000, Proginoskes gmail.com>
wrote:
>On Sep 30, 8:07 pm, "gb6...@ yahoo.com" yahoo.com> wrote:
>> On Sep 30, 12:37 pm, "Dave L. Renfro" cmich.edu> wrote:
>>
>>
>>
>>> gb6...@ yahoo.com" yahoo.com> wrote (in part...
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Author: AndroclesAndrocles Date: Oct 1, 2007 02:14
"quasi" wrote in message
news:6391g35hlhescks0ecu5hdtcmpdmv0a2i4@4ax.com...
: On Mon, 01 Oct 2007 04:57:01 -0000, Proginoskes gmail.com>
: wrote:
:
: >On Sep 30, 8:07 pm, "gb6...@yahoo.com" yahoo.com> wrote:
: >> On Sep 30, 12:37 pm, "Dave L. Renfro" cmich.edu> wrote:
: >>
: >>
: >>
: >> > gb6...@yahoo.com" yahoo.com> wrote (in part):
: >>
: >> > > Google's Streetview software now like Orwell watches
: >> > > all streets and allows people to peek into people's
: >> > > home windows. Google says people see what they
: >> > > would if they would go to those streets.
: >>
: >> > I didn't know much about this so I googled for the
: >> > site. As far as I can tell, it's only in 9 locations
: >> > in the U.S. (and all but 2 are in coastal areas) and ...
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Author: Jesse F. HughesJesse F. Hughes Date: Oct 1, 2007 04:22
> On Sep 30, 12:37 pm, "Dave L. Renfro" cmich.edu> wrote:
>> gb6...@ yahoo.com" yahoo.com> wrote (in part):
>>
>>> Google's Streetview software now like Orwell watches
>>> all streets...
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Author: MarshallMarshall Date: Oct 1, 2007 08:17
On Oct 1, 12:45 am, quasi wrote:
> On Mon, 01 Oct 2007 04:57:01 -0000, Proginoskes gmail.com>
> wrote:
>>On Sep 30, 8:07 pm, "gb6...@ yahoo.com" yahoo.com> wrote:
>>> On Sep 30, 12:37 pm, "Dave L. Renfro" cmich.edu> wrote:
>
>>>> I didn't know much about this so I googled for the
>>>> site. As far as I can tell, it's only in 9 locations
>>>> in the U.S. (and all but 2 are in coastal areas) and
>>>> nowhere outside the U.S. I'd hardly say this is
>>>> "all streets", or even more than a very extremely tiny
>>>> fraction of all streets (even in the U.S.). And even
>>>> if it were all streets in the U.S., if the cameras
>>>> are only confined to street locations, no one is
>>>> going to be able to see into your home window unless
>>>> your house is right up on the street (or pretty close,
>>>> with a very short driveway).
>
>>> Violates basic constitutional rights.
> ...
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