Street Views?

   / Street Views? #21  
What annoys me is I've noticed that there is a subset of humanity who responds to being lost by driving as fast as possible. Pretty much exclusively men. Guys will come down the driveway, and I know they saw on the way in that we have kids, dogs, chickens and livestock everywhere, and on the way out they'll drive like they're fleeing a crime scene. Grr.

I don't know if it's so much being lost or feeling like they are in trouble. We get a lot of nosy folks come down our driveway since we're one of a handful of houses in a new development. They would have to drive through an open gate and past two sets of no-trespassing signs and go 500' to see the house, which tells me they are either stupid or very bold. If nobody is outside, they will gawk for a few minutes and then back out the way they came. If I happen to be in the yard, they scramble like a squirrel in traffic. I watched one guy nearly get his car stuck in my drainage ditch trying to turn around in a 12' wide driveway (not even something I'd attempt). Left some nice ruts in my new grassy shoulder. I'd suspect these were crooks casing the house, but their cars are too nice and new....
 
   / Street Views? #22  
Google stopped at our gate. I put up a gate where we own the land on both sides of the private road. The road is public but eventually turns private and is not maintained by the county. The parcels go to the middle of the road and past the gate we own all of the land.

The road has a gate and is posted but that does not stop numerous people from driving up the road and some will drive up to the house. :rolleyes:

The day Google took street view photos the gate was closed so they had to stop. I have always wondered if they would have kept driving up the road if the gate had been open.

Later,
Dan
 
   / Street Views? #23  
I live on a private gravel subdivision road that is not posted or gated, just has a small yellow "Pvt Rd" notation on the street sign. Neither Bing nor Google street view has never come down our road even though it's pretty wide and well-maintained, but they have done the state highway that we're off of. So it puzzles me when I hear that they are going down people's driveways. Algorithms, go figure.
 
Last edited:
   / Street Views? #24  
Gates, gates, and more gates, all with locks. They're a pain to open and close but, keeps riffraff out.

Does anyone know how often the Google Earth pics are updated? I did not see a date anywhere on the pic.
 
   / Street Views? #25  
A few years ago, when the county auditor hired a company to update property values, (now the rest is according to the paper,
so who knows the complete story) one of the company vehicles drove down the farm lane to check out a structure without
permission of the owner. The owner was not home at the time. The owner came home and stopped them and called the
sheriff. The deputy considered it trespassing and the auditor and the hired company said they would no longer go past
the homestead area without permission of the owner. Again, that is per the paper. Taking pictures on private property
without permission is trespassing. From the public road, it is fine. I think any TV camera person could tell you some
stories.
 
   / Street Views? #26  
japody, according to this FAQ, every 2-3 years mostly.

Streetview (in Google) used to show me by my grill in front of the house in the city and my wife on the porch. The Streetview in Upstate NY showed our car next to the house, a neat trick since we are only there 4 weeks out of the year (insert sad face). Both views have been replaced.

Bing apparently has not rolled out their version of Streetview yet which I think is called Streetside. I have found the "Birds Eye" views in Bing Maps very useful. They are shot from an aircraft instead of a satellite (not available everywhere. I stitched together screenshots of the aerials together in Photoshop that although time consuming got me a vey nice aerial view of my entire 80 acres. I've overlaid property boundaries and topographic lines from a 1960's topo map which then had to transform to add perspective.
 
   / Street Views? #27  
Also, there have been a few old roads vacated in the county. That is done by the township trustees and the county engineer. What Google or Bing have are not the legal roads or property boundaries. The legal boundaries of properties and roads are at the county courthouse. If our farm lane showed up as a "road" in Google or Bing and someone tried to use it, they would end up with a shotgun pointed at them.
 
   / Street Views? #28  
When you consider the sheer amount of data they are dealing with, they do pretty good. I'm near a lake that was flooded in the 1980s, and there are many abandoned roads around the periphery that, if you followed them, you would get wet. For many years one of those roads was labeled as my road, but it's been fixed.

You can make corrections, btw: Google Map Maker

I've made a few minor modifications myself.

I suspect the maps drivers follow a predetermined route derived from (duh) Google Maps. So if Google Maps has a driveway labeled as a road or an abandoned road shown as active, they will try to drive down it, but they likely have discretion to turn around (and hopefully submit corrections) when they encounter gates, no tresspassing signs, etc. On the other hand if an active road is not labeled, they probably won't even attempt to drive down it.
 
   / Street Views? #29  
Gates, gates, and more gates, all with locks. They're a pain to open and close but, keeps riffraff out.

Does anyone know how often the Google Earth pics are updated? I did not see a date anywhere on the pic.

A solar powered opener takes the pain out of opening and closing gates, as does a keypad nearby when you don't have a clicker handy.

I think Google Earth (the stand alone application for your computer) displays the date the photo was taken at the bottom of the window. It also has a feature that lets you look at photos from a previous time. Don't know for sure, but I think Google Maps (in a web browser) uses the same satellite imagery, but near as I can tell, there's no "way back machine" feature.
 
   / Street Views? #30  
Google earth show me and my friends doing my roof.
 
   / Street Views? #31  
I live in a PRIVATE community. We own and maintain the roads, dam and all other things in the community. Google Earth drives right past the Members Only signs and No Trespassing sign and films anyway.

We get people all the time think our pool and lake are public. Actually had an idiot tell me her attorney said she did have a right to be here. Our security spends all its time running out trespassers.

No amount of signs help because they are not smart enough to read them.
 
   / Street Views? #32  
I'll soon be moving and also have that gate ... about 3000' to the house. The aerial view of the site was taken more than 5 years ago. Hopefully, it will update before I build - or not for a long long time.

As for census - the government has the obligation to tabulate its population every 10 years. Unfortunately, it has seen fit to use this process to invade and encroach upon private information that is NONE of its business. I answer "1", then tell them to get the H___ off my property.


I don't see this issue as having anything at all to do with government census. It simply fits the electronic world we live in. The vast majority of drivers in America today can't get to Wal-Mart without turning on their vehicle guidance system.

I think the person that visited the OP was very cordial to even take the time to stop and talk to him. My property faces a public road and no one stopped to talk to me, although the frontage of my property is clearly pictured in great detail.
 
   / Street Views? #33  
sometimes the street view pics are taken at different times. mine would show a vehicle in the driveway. click to the next view, vehicle not there. next view, vehicle is there....
 
   / Street Views? #37  
A few years ago, when the county auditor hired a company to update property values, (now the rest is according to the paper,
so who knows the complete story) one of the company vehicles drove down the farm lane to check out a structure without
permission of the owner. The owner was not home at the time. The owner came home and stopped them and called the
sheriff. The deputy considered it trespassing and the auditor and the hired company said they would no longer go past
the homestead area without permission of the owner. Again, that is per the paper. Taking pictures on private property
without permission is trespassing. From the public road, it is fine. I think any TV camera person could tell you some
stories.

For additional tax harvesting, some jurisdictions have gone to aerial surveys for rural property. So long as the plane/chopper/drone obeys FAA rules, AFAIK those pics are legal.

Rgds, D.
 
   / Street Views? #38  
My farmhouse (in NC) is located on a private drive that is about 1000' in length. I share the first 500' or so with a neighbor.

Late last fall, a car with a roof-top camera showed up at my farmhouse while I was working in the yard. The driver informed me that he was working for Bing and that street views of my homestead would show up on the Bing site in three months or so. However, he gave me the info that I would need to contact Bing in order to have the views deleted when they are posted. I plan to have the views deleted.

I suppose that I have been remiss in not posting a "Private Drive" sign, but I am not sure that would have deterred the driver.

I am curious about how others who live on private drives feel about having photos of their homesteads showing up on the Internet.

Steve

Not happy about it. My county uses ArcGIS which backends over GoogleMaps. They use it for tax purposes. Unfortunate it is not tied into the real data housed under their plat, deed and taxations databases. So, a map which draws boundaries and exposes things is subject to interpretation. Like sheet metal laying out in the field taxed as a structure. The street view would rectify that, but I am sure, expose additional issues with size, number and condition of things.
 
   / Street Views? #39  
We had a new electrical service added to my shop , this meant cutting down a big Maple by the road and adding a utility pole. Google came by and upgraded their pictures. Now it looks like summer on one side of the drive fall on the other. Wife's in the garden tending flowers I'm in the drive shoveling snow. ---Trevor
 
   / Street Views? #40  
Huh - I've never seen Google out my way. Google Earth has good satellite pics of my place. I guessing Google isn't overly concerned about street views in my neck of the woods.

My driveway is a mile long and its been there since I had it built in '82. Doesn't matter what kind, type, color etc of sign I put up at the gate - there is alway going to be some people who open the gate and come down the driveway - just to see what's there.

And I've even had a couple folks argue with me that they have the right to be there. I just excuse myself and tell them I'm going back into the house to get the shotgun - they get the idea right away.

People - you gotta love them - they don't move quite as fast as a shotgun blast.
 

Tractor & Equipment Auctions

2002 Ford E-450 Enclosed Service Van (A59230)
2002 Ford E-450...
2021 Kubota SVL75-2 Track Loader (A56438)
2021 Kubota...
2010 Ford F-550 4x4 Venturo HT40KX 3 Ton Crane Mechanics Truck (A59230)
2010 Ford F-550...
2019 Yongfu Scooter (A59231)
2019 Yongfu...
UNKNOWN  500BBL FRAC TANK (A58214)
UNKNOWN 500BBL...
2019 GALYEAN EQUIPMENT CO. 150BBL STEEL (A58214)
2019 GALYEAN...
 
Top