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Woman Sues Google Over Street View Shots of Her Underwear

Kittenman writes "The Telegraph (and several US locals) are covering a story about a Japanese woman who had her underwear on the line while the Google car went past. She is now suing Google: 'I was overwhelmed with anxiety that I might be the target of a sex crime,' the woman told a district court. 'It caused me to lose my job and I had to change my residence.'"

7 of 417 comments (clear)

  1. Streisand Effect by dragonhunter21 · · Score: 5, Funny

    Congragulations, miss. The entire readership of /. will now see your underwear.

    Well done.

    --
    Sent from my CR-48
  2. So? by ThatMegathronDude · · Score: 5, Funny

    She wasn't wearing them at the time, so who cares?

    1. Re:So? by Monkeedude1212 · · Score: 5, Funny

      It was never really meant as a meme but rather a quick way to convey your concurrence to a statement.

      Like the whole
      tl;dr = Too Long Didn't Read
      IANAL = I am not a Lawyer
      LoL = Laugh out Loud

      This = Indubitably my good sir! Your clever insight and concise conveyance of the subject matter at hand was quite enjoyable and I agree with your statement in every facet that one might be agreeable.

  3. Other commenters are wrong by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 5, Funny

    I know many people are saying that she should not have left them out to dry in public view. She made her mistake long before that.

    She is in Japan. She shouldn't have washed them in the first place; instead she could have sold them for a nice profit.

  4. Re:Expectation of Privacy by Rary · · Score: 5, Interesting

    It seems hard to imagine that the woman expected her delicates to stay completely private when she hung them up for the entire world to see.

    This is the part that really stands out. What makes you think she hung them up "for the entire world to see"? I mean, what we have today is kind of a whole new level in the public vs. private continuum. There's "private". Then there's "public". But then there's "on the Internet", which is a whole different ball of wax.

    There is a shift that needs to happen in how we view things. Obviously, the moment you step out of a private residence, you can no longer expect privacy. But perhaps there is a reasonable expectation of something that falls somewhere between "private" and "on the Internet".

    --

    "You cannot simultaneously prevent and prepare for war." -- Albert Einstein

  5. Re:Ugh, this again? by darkstar949 · · Score: 5, Informative

    Might not have been the front yard. In Japan it's actually unusually to have a dryer so people will dry their clothing outside on a patio or balcony.

  6. More Details. NOT a regular Streetview Photo... by kumanopuusan · · Score: 5, Informative

    Someone took a picture of her underwear and posted it on Google Streetview...

    Here's the original article.

    From the original article in the Mainichi Shinbun, "It seems that someone posted the picture of her underwear on the internet.[...] She said, "If it had been an exterior view of the apartment that's understandable, but that a photo of my underwear drying on the veranda should appear is strange no matter how you look at it."

    Again, this isn't just a case of something weird showing up on Streetview, according to the woman in question. Her paranoia is a little more understandable considering that she claims someone took a picture of her underwear and went to the trouble of posting it where she would likely find it. Being concerned about harassment or stalking isn't completely unreasonable.

    Some other details that were left out of the English article include that the woman in question is from Fukuoka City in Fukuoka, that she's in her twenties, that she was fired from the hospital were she was working, that she lived alone at the time of the incident, that she found the photo this Spring, that she filed suit in November in Fukuoka District Court and that opening arguments were heard on December 15th. As of December 15th, Google was hurrying to verify the facts of the case.

    There was a 2channel thread about the story that referred to it as "MyPantyView," but unfortunately Slashdot's Japanese counterparts had no comment on the matter.

    --
    Use of the words "good", "bad" or "evil" is almost invariably the result of oversimplification.