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section heading icon     skies

This page considers questions regarding aerial and satellite photography, geospatial services such as GoogleEarth and the emergence of practices such as moshing.

It covers -

subsection heading icon     introduction

It is increasingly common to encounter concerns about Google Earth and other online map services that allow users to graze satellite images that are often of high quality.

We can expect more of those services, for two reasons.

The first is recognition among governments that selling satellite photos - whether en masse or on a shot by shot (location by location) basis - is an effective way of offsetting the costs of getting the 'birds' into the sky and keeping them there. Mark Monmonier, whose 2002 Spying with Maps: Surveillance Technologies and the Future of Privacy is an elegant introduction to visual surveillance, notes increasing acceptance after France's success with SPOT imagery.

Satellite photos - in a range of formats and resolutions - have been commercially available for some time. Their availability has been publicised online and in the print media, with a vogue during 2003-2005 for newspapers to offer colour 'spies in the skies' snaps of their reader's neighbourhoods.

We can expect supply to increase as states (such as China) with offworld ambitions follow the French model and offset satellite program costs by building and retailing digital landscapes and as data processing costs continue to decline (facilitating generation of digital three dimensional landscapes and overlay of non-photographic information).

The second reason is the perception that there is a deep and broad demand among business, government and individuals for historic and realtime geospatial information.

That extends beyond curiosity value - "what does my house look like from space" or "can I spot Elvis and the UFOs at Area 51" - to encompass such applications as -

  • directions about the quickest way to get across town,
  • mapping the extent of a locust outbreak,
  • determining whether a paddock needs more irrigation,
  • proving your favourite multinational has unloaded toxic waste into a waterway overnight,
  • tracking which traffic snarl has your parcel,
  • sussing out 'the best neighbourhood' with Internet-based Neighbourhood Information Systems (IBNIS)
  • or enabling your local government computer to send letters of demand to those homeowners who evaded the tax on backyard pools.

Eyes in the skies are not necessarily objectionable or even that new.

As noted in discussion elsewhere on this site regarding privacy, people have been using their ingenuity for several hundred years to get a sense of what's happening on the other side of the fence or behind the hedge.

Surveillance has thus involved planes, balloons and even the humble step ladder. The landmark 1937 privacy and intellectual property Victoria Park case by Australia's High Court - (Victoria Park Racing & Recreation Grounds Co Ltd v Taylor (58 CLR 479) - for example involved a radio station that successfully evaded restrictions on access to a racecourse by simply perching its race caller on a stand that overlooked the course but was outside the boundaries of that property.

And for some civil libertarians the overhead cameras are less worrisome than very recent innovations such as 'drive by' thermal imaging, with some US police forces for example cruising the streets looking for the heat signatures that might indicate a householder is keeping the marijuana plants - rather than the family pets - warm in winter.

Services such as Google Earth are significant because they embody a digital landscape, one in which it is possible to integrate huge collections of images with other data collections. For us that 'leverage' is the salient concern, rather than the availability of images per se. It is a counterpart of the large-scale data mining undertaken by commercial profiling agencies for credit reference or other purposes - using machines to quickly assemble and parse disparate information sets that in isolation are innocuous but when integrated build a detailed (and often misleading) picture that might be abused by organisations and individuals.

At a more mundane level another concern is the absence of an informed debate about public access to (and the terms of commercialisation of) existing public sector geospatial databases. Licensing or outright sale of information collected by government - often collected on a mandatory basis - is recurrently identified as an easy source of revenue. Experience overseas suggests that some agencies have sold too cheaply or without appropriate attention to restrictions that would protect privacy.

You do not, to the amazement of some readers of Clarke's paper, have an excusive right in images of your dwelling or outdoor activity taken by planes, dirigibles, satellites, kites, skydivers or even pigeons equipped with the fabled Minox camera. In most jurisdictions you arguably have no rights.

That has attracted attention from legal practitioners and theorists, in cases such as the action by Barbra Streisand and others, highlighted in earlier pages of this site, against an enthusiast who sought to publish his aerial photos of the entire California coastline. No no! said residents of some of the more expensive realestate - publication is a breach of our privacy, will facilitate burglary, lead to kidnapping of our children or pets, erode our property value ...

Action becomes even more complicated when the camera is located in orbit, rather than in a light plane, and its operator (or merely the publisher) is located in another jurisdiction. You can send a scary letter to the local geek who's using a wireless connection to send photos from a balloon but will Microsoft or Google deign to even open your correspondence? Will the people behind the cash registers in Paris simply ROFL, as the digital mission civilatrice does not recognise the jurisdiction of courts in Australia? (Complaints from New Zealand will presumably be addressed through another Rainbow Warrior bombing by the French Secret Service.)

Perhaps expectations about such imaging systems will evolve in pace with the development of personality rights (aka rights of publicity), situated at the intersection of privacy and intellectual property law, not explicitly recognised in most jurisdictions and exploited primarily by celebrities.

In the forseeable future there is no reason to believe that Google and its peers will adopt one enthusiast's suggestion that image service providers notify the authorities if someone buys an image of an address (so much for the consumer's privacy) and pass on a share of the proceeds to the building owner/resident.

subsection heading icon     studies


Pointers to debate about cctv, geospatial system and other surveillance feature elsewhere on this site. They include Roger Clarke's paper on Vis Surveillance and Privacy.







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