Certainly since early 2007 when Google first started photographing streets outside the United States, they have made great efforts to comply. You talked about the blurring technology for faces, your license plate, and so on. You can have your house taken down or have part of it blurred. That's fine for the Street View photo-imaging product.
But the thing that concerns me is that then we had the Google Buzz fiasco, in which people's identities were revealed one to another without their consent in an attempt to create a kind of social networking within your Gmail correspondence. Your Gmail correspondent could have been, one, your mother, two, your doctor, or three, somebody you had an intimate relationship with. All of a sudden, these people who perhaps didn't even know that the others existed in your life found themselves in an instant social network. That was something that caused us concern. It was almost instantly withdrawn because there was a huge outcry.
Then there was this third thing, which is that, unbeknownst to Google, it was collecting personal information. So it's not that once something is brought to Google's attention they don't clean it up; the question is, why aren't they starting with privacy principles at the beginning? And why are Canadian taxpayers or Spanish taxpayers and so on spending a lot of time and effort when these companies should get it right from the beginning before they launch their products?