Red_Rattler
Since 09 May 2003
Since many people have looked at their own front doors on SV this week, and seen the level of detail, I did wonder if there might be some privacy issues here.
Not in Australia.lewisner said:Yes possibly. I can see why people might get the hump about somebody using their house in a model, but I think any case brought to court would be rejected for wasting time.
** The following is for Australia ONLY **
See: http://blogs.smh.com.au/photographers/archives/2007/02/photography_is_not_a_crime.html
Full article in above link
LEGAL: In Australia, in public, photography is legal (for now) and consent does not need to be obtained for those people being photographed. Even taking a picture over someone's fence is OK. Go on, try it... Do it every day though and it will become stalking...
Councils have tried to ban photography (unsuccessfully) and the Commonwealth government reviewed all aspects of 'unauthorised' photography in 2005 (discussion paper - 296Kb PDF). The Coffs Harbour Eisteddfod Society was so afraid of breaching child protection laws it banned parents from photographing the performances featuring their children. Whether it had the right to do so was never tested.
Basically though, if you are on public property, you can shoot it*. Public property and publicly accessible places are two different things. Train stations and beaches are public property, the QVB and Westfields aren't.
PRIVACY: "A person, in our society, does not have a right not to be photographed." So stated Justice John Dowd in a 2001 case (R v Sotheren) in the NSW Supreme Court. In Australia there is no right to privacy. If you don't want to be photographed sun-baking topless on a beach then don't sun-bake topless on a beach. Oops! You did it again? You got out of a car after forgetting to don some undies and now your genitals are all over the internet? That's your problem, or one of them at least.
Indeed, if you don't want to be photographed then you should think twice about leaving your home. If you go to a shopping centre, service station, train station, carpark, office block (your office block) then you are probably being photographed. Stuck in traffic? Your on RTA-cam. Have you ever asked yourself who controls the footage? What policies are in place regarding its use? Are the people who have access to it screened? How secure are the systems? It's easy to whip up fear around photography, but the worst is perpetrated by a very small minority.
About Street View quality: Too many Street View posts in the linked forum to find out, but I think the better question would be: Since Street View is just a reasonable recent addition, why did Google choose to use low-quality camera's in the first place, when higher-quality cameras would have been available.
Last edited: