A lawsuit filed by a U.S. couple, Aaron and Christine Boring of Pennsylvania, accusing Google of invading their privacy by publishing Street View pictures of their home has been thrown out by U.S. magistrate judge, Amy Reynolds Hay. The couple had been seeking cash damages for when Google maps published picture of their home, which exists on a privately owned road.Judge Hay dismissed every accusation individually in the 12-page ruling, concluding that the accusations were legally unsustainable, and ultimately dismissed the entire case.She wrote: "The court is not obligated to accept inferences unsupported by facts set out in the complaint, and is not required to accept legal conclusions framed as factual allegations." In part, she concluded that the claims failed to meet the legal standard of being "highly offensive to an ordinary reasonable person."Judge Hay even went on to arguably insult the plaintiffs by writing in her ruling: "While it is easy to imagine that many whose property appears on Google's virtual maps resent the privacy implications, it is hard to believe that any -- other than the most exquisitely sensitive -- would suffer shame or humiliation."Previous concerns over privacy in California had prompted Google to blur out people's faces who happened to be caught in Street View photographs as the Google cars drove past. From; http://www.tgdaily.com/html_tmp/content-view-41477-118.html

............................................................................................

EXPERIENCE IS NOT WHAT HAPPENS TO A MAN BUT IT IS WHAT A MAN DOES WITH WHAT HAPPENS TO HIM