India says ‘no’ to Google Street View

10 Jun 2016

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India has once again underlined its anathema to cartography of its territory by denying permission to Google to roll out its Google Street View services, which give street-level and 360-degree views of cities and popular tourist spots in Google Maps citing security considerations, officials said on Thursday.

Most of the images for street view application are captured by cameras mounted on cars but some of it is also done through trekkers, tricycles, boats, snowmobiles, camels, and underwater apparatus.

The online images are accessible to all.

According to reports, Google will have to wait for a year or two before it could capture street-level images of the country's cities as the government wants the pending Geospatial Information Regulation Bill to be enacted before considering the internet giant's application afresh.

''All such issues will be sorted out after the bill comes into being,'' said Kiren Rijiju, minister of state for home affairs.

The geospatial bill is being brought to regulate data and high-resolution images collected from the skies and shared through applications such as Google Earth or Map.

Street View application is a technology featured in Google Maps and Google Earth applications that provides panoramic views from positions along many streets in the world. It was launched in 2007 in several cities in the United States and now covers a large part of the world.

Once the bill is enacted, disseminating, publishing or displaying information that is likely to affect ''security, sovereignty or integrity'' of the country will become a punishable crime.

Reports said the security agencies and ministry of defence had analysed security implications of allowing capturing of this kind of imagery and threats posed by it. Security sources say some of targets for the 26/11 Mumbai attacks were shown to the attackers by their handlers using similar applications.

''The government had allowed Google to capture street-level imagery of some of the tourist spots like Qutub Minar, Taj Mahal, Red Fort an experimental basis. But the matter didn't go further than that,'' Hindustan Times cited a senior official as saying.

Sources said once the geospatial data bill is enacted, India can make a legally binding for service providers to exclude sensitive security installations like forward airbases, nuclear plants or Prime Minister's residence from coverage by the applications.

Notably, other democracies seem to have no such qualms despite the recent terror attacks in Europe (See: Google Maps may soon need permission to depict India).

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