 Google Inc has  complied with a request by the Pentagon to remove some online  images from its street-level map service because they pose a  security threat to U.S. military bases, military and company  officials said on Thursday.
Google Inc has  complied with a request by the Pentagon to remove some online  images from its street-level map service because they pose a  security threat to U.S. military bases, military and company  officials said on Thursday.
  Gen. Gene Renuart, head of the military command responsible  for homeland defense, said the Pentagon had talked to Google  about the risks and expected the company to cooperate in  removing selected images from its Street View service.
   "We have been contacted by the military," Google spokesman  Larry Yu said. "In those instances where they (the U.S  military) have expressed concerns about the imagery, we have  accommodated their requests."
   The Defense Department, which is still studying how many  images are available, has also banned Google teams from taking  video images on bases.
   "We've got to get a sense of what is there and see how we  can mitigate it," Renuart said.
   But because many images were taken from public streets, the  military may not have a legal right to request that videos be  pulled.
   Street View, a feature of Google Maps, offers ground-level,  360-degree views of streets in 30 U.S. cities. Web users are  able to drive down a street, in a virtual sense, using their  mouse to adjust views of roadside scenery.
   The feature has become a popular service for drivers  seeking to plan a trip to an unfamiliar neighborhoods. But from  the outset, Street View has been a magnet of controversy over  potential privacy invasion of people captured in the images.
   In one instance, a man was pictured exiting a San Francisco  strip club. In another case, a woman was shown sunbathing.  Complaints have even included a woman asking that a picture of  her cat be taken down, a request Google denied.
   The images that worry the Pentagon include views of bases,  including security at the entrances to those installations.
   "It actually shows where all the guards are. It shows how  the barriers go up and down. It shows how to get in and out of  buildings," said Renuart, commander of U.S. Northern Command.
   "I think that poses a real security risk for our military  installations," he told reporters at the Pentagon.
   The Google spokesman said his company's policy was to  photograph only those images visible from public roads.
   "It is against Google's policy for a driver to seek access  to a military base," Yu said.
   Street View has yet to be introduced outside the United  States. Web-based Google Maps and a related computer-based  service called Google Earth have drawn criticism from a variety  of countries for providing images of sensitive locations, such  as military bases or potential targets of terror attacks.
   The services rely on civilian versions of satellite maps  that it licenses from commercial mapping services.
Source: http://news.yahoo.com/, 
Google pulls some map images at Pentagon's request