Google Sightseeing takes you on tour of the world as seen from satellite, using the free Google Earth program, or Google Maps in your web browser. Each weekday your guides James and Alex present new weird and wonderful sights as suggested by readers.

The editors: James & Alex

Subverting Street View

Posted by Alex Turnbull, Wednesday, 24th December 2008

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Despite Google’s oh-so-clever “face-blurring” technology, sometimes people’s faces don’t get recognised by the system, and make it onto the Street View imagery unaltered.

Here at the Colosseum in Rome, a couple found a perfect way to fool the camera… by engaging in a steamily passionate kiss!

This kiss was so passionate in fact, that someone at Google appears to have been charged with manually pixellating the offending image - presumably to save us the embarrassment of having to see a couple kissing.

Like no-one’s ever seen that on the Internet before…

What is interesting though, is that they bothered to pixellate the image themselves, rather than (as we’ve seen many times before) just remove the image completely. Presumably this is thanks to the fact that the Colosseum is one of Italy’s most famous tourist destinations.

The moral of the story? If you want to be seen on Google Street View doing something outrageous, make sure you’re in front of a hugely recognisable landmark.

4 Responses to 'Subverting Street View'

  1. Dale says:

    They didn’t pixellate it for us, they pixellated it for them, so they’d be less recognizable.

  2. Lester Hunt says:

    I read somewhere that the Canadian government at one point was threatening to ban Google from photographing there unless they blurred out all faces and license plates. So maybe Google is concerned with legal or regulatory problems involving “privacy.”

  3. david says:

    outrageous, this kissing in public.

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