Austria In
Austria, Street View was banned shortly after the launch after
Wi-Fi data was collected unauthorized. The ban has since been lifted but strict regulations were put in place that caused Street View to not be deployed despite available data. In July 2018, imagery in various cities in Austria was released. On June 19, 2020, imagery across most of the rest of Austria was released.
Czech Republic In the
Czech Republic, Street View was banned in September 2010 by the Czech Office for Personal Data Protection after more than half a year of unsuccessful negotiation between the Czech Republic and Google. The office described Google's program as taking pictures "beyond the extent of the ordinary sight from a street", and that it "disproportionately invade citizens' privacy." However, pictures taken before this decision (mostly in 2009) may have remained available online; Google obliged to erase every picture from that period should they be disputed. In May 2011, the ban was lifted after Google lowered the cameras by .
Denmark According to a Danish media lawyer, Oluf Jørgensen, Google's practice of photographing people on private property is illegal. The Danish data authorities advised people who are photographed by Google to report it to police. In 2010, Denmark, along with Ireland and Austria, requested that Google delete the WiFi data the company had collected unauthorized. Google complied with all three requests. This requirement was abolished on January 1, 2012. Google was instructed to give advance notice online and in the local press before photographing.
Germany In an April 2009 interview for the German magazine
Focus, Google's Global Privacy Counsel Peter Fleischer remarked that "public opposition to Google Street View in Germany, though not hysterical, had been tougher than in any other country." On the same occasion he stated that the project has now been "essentially aligned with the concerns of data privacy advocates," and that "specific privacy tools would be developed for the German launch while imaging continues at the fastest possible pace." The option to have specific images removed would also apply for locations in Germany. German Foreign Minister and Vice Chancellor
Guido Westerwelle said "I will do all I can to prevent it." However, Interior Minister
Thomas de Maizière said that people should not get "hysterical" about the issue and called for "caution in introducing blanket rules allowing objections." As of October 2010, 244,237 German households have opted out from Street View. Google complied by blurring the facades on the corresponding Street View images. This procedure is misleadingly called '
pixelating' in Germany (German: 'Verpixeln'). These photos were removed in July 2023 awaiting the publication of the 2022 images. In April 2013 Google was fined €145,000 for illegally recording information from unsecured wireless networks. On July 25, 2023, new Street View images were released (taken in 2022), including the 20 largest cities and many new areas were added. Despite that many areas are not covered in the first 2023 rollout, additions of many more areas as well updated 2023 imagery is scheduled to be published in the future.
Greece Google had been stopped from gathering images in Greek cities for its Street View service until it provided further guarantees about privacy. However, on January 18, 2010, the government legalized the service under the condition that adequate privacy protection would be realized. The service is enabled since June 2014.
Lithuania In May 2012 the Lithuanian State Data Protection Inspectorate (SDPI) refused permission for the Google Street View project to operate in Lithuania. The Transport Minister asked the Inspectorate to review its decision. The decision was changed and Google later was able to take photos of streets in Lithuania.
Poland In May 2009 the Polish GIODO (– Chief Inspectorate for the Protection of Personal Data) expressed doubts about Google Street View and its privacy, mostly concerned about the same issues as in other EU countries. However, from 2010 onwards, Google cars appeared on the Polish streets with the consent of state authorities and in consultation with the Ministry of Sport and Tourism. In 2011 GIODO began monitoring service Street View and published the report which included non-binding demand that Google should clearly communicate and warn when it's going to take pictures in a certain area at a certain time. It was also proposed that car drivers should be added to the records of persons who process personal data in accordance with the Polish law.
Switzerland In November 2009,
Switzerland's
Federal Data Protection and Information Commissioner Hanspeter Thür announced that his agency would be suing Google because in Street View "numerous faces and vehicle number plates are not made sufficiently unrecognizable from the point of view of data protection".
United Kingdom In the first days of launch the UK service drew criticism due to privacy. Images were found of a man leaving a
sex shop, a man vomiting and another man being arrested. Some images were removed including those of areas around
Downing Street. The service drew criticism in
Belfast that it represented a "reckless" security risk, particularly for showing the exteriors of army bases and police stations so soon after the killing of two soldiers in the
2009 Massereene Barracks shooting, and a police officer. Soon after the launch human rights watchdog
Privacy International sent a formal complaint about the service to the UK
Information Commissioner's Office (ICO), which cited more than 200 reports from members of the public who were identifiable on Street View images. Privacy International director Simon Davies said that the organization had filed the complaint due to the "clear embarrassment and damage" Street View had caused to many
Britons. He said that Street View fell short of the assurances given by Google to the ICO in July 2008 that had enabled its launch, namely that privacy would be protected by blurring faces and vehicle licence plates, and asked for the system to be "switched off" while an investigation was completed. He said the few cases where Google's face blurring system had failed meant the data used by Street View would fall under UK
Data Protection legislation, which requires that subjects give permission for the use of information concerning them. Davies subsequently sent an open letter to then-Google chief executive
Eric Schmidt, accusing the company of briefing journalists against him, claiming Davies was biased in favour of
Microsoft. Google has pointed to connections between Microsoft and data protection consultancy
80/20 Thinking, run by Davies, and has said that Davies' connections to Microsoft should be made clear in public, as the credibility of his criticisms is undermined by the fact that he acts as a consultant to companies who are direct rivals and critics of Google, a fact Davies rarely discloses in press releases or comments. On April 23, 2009, the Information Commissioner ruled that although Google Street View carries a small risk of privacy invasion it should not be stopped. They ruled that "There is no law against anyone taking pictures of people in the street as long as the person using the camera is not harassing people". They also ruled that Google Street View does not contravene the Data Protection Act, as an image of a house held on Street View is not a data protection matter, as data protection is about people's personal information. In March 2010, Google was forced to remove images of military, security and intelligence installations admitting that it had ignored signs warning that photographing the sites breached the
Official Secrets Act with fears that the published photographs could be useful to terrorists. == References ==