Google Street View's cameras have returned to Germany more than a decade after a privacy backlash in the country pushed it to stop updating images.
Alphabet Inc.'s update will start with new photos of the streets and landmarks of the country's 20 largest cities and expand from there, the company said in a blog post on Tuesday. Google voluntarily suspended Street View photography in Germany in 2011, after an outcry from privacy advocates and opposition from regulators.
“We've been back on the road with our vehicles in Germany since June and will be posting the latest images as they become available - adding footage from other regions across the country,” Sven Tresp, a program manager for Street View, wrote. Google is posting information about where its cameras are traveling, he said.
The Street View rollout across Europe more than a decade ago triggered probes by data protection watchdogs across the European Union. The investigations included a probe by the Hamburg authority, where Google had its main German base. Some led to fines, including a €1 million ($1.1 million) penalty in Italy.
One of the main concerns at the time was that the cars Google used to take photos of neighborhoods also collected personal data via Wi-Fi networks. The company also fielded complaints from Germans who were concerned about their privacy.
The Street View probes took years for regulators to conclude and the mixed outcomes ultimately helped fuel a debate about modernizing the bloc's data protection rules. It culminated years later in the EU's General Data Protection Regulation, considered one of the most rigorous set of privacy regulations globally.
“Times have changed,” Lena Heuermann, a Google spokesperson said when asked why the company is
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