Google's Amazon River Street View Project
Thanks to Google and the Foundation for a Sustainable Amazon (FAS), your days of paddling up and down the Amazon basin looking for a fishing camp are over. Google is expanding its Street View service to cover a 30-mile section of the Rio Negro River tributary from Manaus to Terra Preta. FAS project leader Gabriel Ribenboim said, "It is very important to show the world not only the environment and the way of life of the traditional population, but to sensitize the world to the challenges of climate change, deforestation and combating poverty."
This means the Google is entering deeper and deeper into Amazon.
Sent as ripples into the electromagnetic field. No single photon has been harmed in the process.
"Candiru-free swimming LOC: Amazon"
I look forward to the day when the floating googlemobiles have been all round the canal system of England and I can work my way up Foxton staircase (http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Foxton_Locks) without leaving my desk.
30 miles down, 30,000+ miles to go. (The Amazon is 4000 miles long, but is divided into many tributaries, the total length of all the tributaries is probably a lot longer than that, but I think that is a safe lower bound.)
Interview with the Googler driving the Amazon River View boat:
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=a0cCRRFi1aA
In a somewhat similar vein, in 2010, Google published the look out of the window of the Trans Siberian Railway: http://www.google.ru/intl/ru/landing/transsib/en.html
Switch back to Slashdot's D1 system.
How can an 'Uncontacted' Amazon tribe post their take down notice?
"You can see right into my hut from the river" said one.
"This is an invasion of our privacy and youve also taken my soul with youre evil box of tricks. You said do no evil! but you have." said another.
These peoples remain 'uncontacted' due to their poor punctuation and grammar.
Google's leaving the door open for indigenous lawyers to sue over certain concerns:
Indigenous Lawyer: Witchdoctor N'(click)'toba, what happened to you after the Google boat photographed you?
Witchdoctor N'(click)'toba: Well, I was in the middle of a particularly difficult fertility spell when the boat came by and stole my soul. The spell failed and the sacrifice was rejected by our gods.
Indigenous Lawyer: Can you identify your soul in this courtroom?
Witchdoctor N'(click)'toba: Yes, it's in the third camera from the right.
Jury of peers: Google guilty!
Judge: Google shall render forth Witchdoctor N'(click)'toba's soul, 12 chickens, 2 pigs, and a cow to the plaintiff. Further punitive damage of 4 wives will also be awarded.
Overly-nagged Google Techie in back of courtroom: Take my wife... PLEASE!
Was the Rio Negro River named by the Department of Redundancy Department?
OK, time to burn some karma...
I lived in Brazil for 5 years, and the Brazilians I talked to didn't consider deforestation to be a problem. In fact, the story I'd consistently hear from them is that much of the deforestation is to support grazing for cattle, and that the same acres end up burned year after year because the forest takes back the grasslands as fast as it's burned. They perceive the Amazon as being largely uninhabitable and untameable, taking back roads and farms faster than they can be built. It's considered a national tragedy that so much land in their country cannot be used for farms, homes, roads, or ranches.
Don't get me wrong, I'm all for conservation and habitat preservation; my been-there/done-that creds include the t-shirt from the Eco '92 conference in Rio. I simply don't see why the environmentalists who so carefully catalog deforestation can't be bothered to simultaneously chart forest re-growth. It should be simple to overlay forest boundaries on a map of Brazil and show the recession of the forest over time; 232,000 square miles (slightly smaller than the state of Texas) is a dramatic loss, and a good graphic showing where it has happened would be media gold - strong, clear evidence supporting the damage to the ecosystem. The fact that I've never seen such a map supports, in my mind, the Brazilians' assertion that it's not really a problem.
Seriously, if someone can disabuse me of this notion I'd appreciate it. I've taken a bunch of heat over the years because, as a self-indentified conservationist, I haven't bought into the "ZOMG BURNING TREEZ IS THE SUXXORZ!!!ONE!!" philosophy that my environmentalist friends take regarding the Amazon. Can there seriously be no balance found between sustaining the needs of the people and the preservation of our ecology? Because telling that to the people who feel like they're already on the losing side of the battle is just kicking them when they're down.
"Space Exploration is not endless circles in low earth orbit." -Buzz Aldrin
I wouldn't be surprised if only the terrorists refused anyone from cataloguing/mapping their properties into Google CIA. Bombs and cruise missiles will soon update the landscape on their final approach, and if there were any politicial or financing issues then the dispute will be resolved in a fassion through an accreditted Google Auctions manner with PayPal.
Anonymouse realy needs to shut down and tamper all these Google intelligence-gathering missions, BECAUSE SOMETHING STINKS OF DEBTOR-nations being surveyed to introduce jurisdictional issues to stifle feuditories like how the Catholic Church continually replaces "Deutchland" with captioning to "Germany" in all the old documentaries conductied in foreign languages to the observers.
Eventually this could be used by infiltraitors to refer to the continent of the States of America as the United States, Korea and Taiwan become "China garbage dump", California becomes Aztlan, Canaan becomes State of Israel instead of Kikeland, and the kingdom of Saudi Arabia is now Assgassistan. Not saying I agree with the name of flags, but Google is helping the CIA to change the global landscape by their maps and fieldguides, and combined with the NSA with automated warfare drones then they are their own army equally capable to US Army and Special Forces.
When I lived in Rio de Janeiro in the 1960s I had a chance to fly into Manaus on an old USAF C-54 and share expenses on a fishing trip into the Amazon and Rio Negro. It was a high point of my life. The area was fascinating in its lush vegetation, vast wetlands, and river traffic. The people - and especially the children - were wonderful. Six of us on an old Chris Craft (type) cabin cruiser plus some local fishing guides with food and drink included for just a couple hundred bucks apiece. It sure beat touring the opera house.
I'll be interested in seeing how much has changed.
No one ever had to evacuate a city because the solar panels broke!
Google is an escrow house now, because they have bean counters right? PayPal isn't a bank or is it, like how Google isn't a suvbersive entity right?
Someday...
"According to federal and State laws, send X-X Amero through Google Credit to remove the crosshairs from your dog violating pet ownership in the city, and if you don't pay now then we'll post a division of your land onto Ebay that will likely be bought by China Bank of Reconstruction. A lunar accounting console will land on your doorstep, since the traveling Census agent catalogued your premises dimensions despite your non-voting record in our MYLIFE.COM database."
I have come to the conclusion that this has nothing to do with Amazon.com
Must...suppress...the truth!
Use mods points at will!
Isn't it also important to desensitize populations to privacy violation, still photo, and video observation?
Amazon? They should start with something smaller and more realistic on water. Did you know there is still no Google street view (canal view?) for the historic Venice in Italy, a city famous the many people getting lost there? (Not just the yearly millions of tourists, but also the locals sometimes). The whole place is tiny, max. 45 mins across on foot accross, but a very tigh maze of narrow foot passes and winding canals.
If anything, probably the cost put off Google from doing the Serenissima Street View project so far. The multi-cam system would need to be hand-carted over much of the land course, with many small non-accessibility bridges in between. A significant part of the canal system is closed to motorboats and the going rate for a gondola ride per hour is very steep.