I'm going to answer that question in two parts.
We know the practices of two companies, Google and Canpages. To give you an example, those two companies reacted to the same problem in very different ways. Google undertook to speak with certain vulnerable groups in advance to ask them what their preferences were and how to manage the problem. We know that it took the initiative of doing so and, to our knowledge, it did a good job of pursuing that approach.
In the case of Canpages, I believe the reverse was true. That company's policy is not to blur the images of buildings because that draws attention to the buildings that are not identified and that, for the reasons you mentioned, no one wants identified. I'm talking more specifically about buildings for women who are victims of violence, for example.