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13 Jan 2010Google has been granted a quite interesting patent for "Claiming Real Estate in Panoramic or 3D Mapping Environments for Advertising". The company filed the patent back in the summer of 2008. The abstract reads:
Techniques for identifying groups of features in an online geographic view of a real property and replacing and/or augmenting the groups of features with advertisement information are described. The techniques include providing a geographic view of a property within an online property management system, identifying a region of interest in the geographic view, analyzing the geographic view to locate one or more promotional features within the geographic view positioned upon a real property region, providing a user-selectable link associated with the region of interest in the geographic view, receiving a request for the region of interest in the geographic view via the user-selectable link, receiving data to alter at least one of the behavior or the appearance of the region of interest, storing the data in association with the geographic view, and updating the region of interest within the geographic view based upon the received data.
Signs, posters, banners, and billboards are frequently mentioned throughout the Patent. So is "street view". The patent is fueling a lot speculation about plans from the company to sell advertising on billboard imagery throughout Google Maps Street View.
ReadWriteWeb who appears to be first to report on the actual patent says, "it looks like Google could potentially identify some billboards and banners in Street View images and then replace these real-life billboards with virtual ads from the highest bidders".
Interestingly, Tom Krazit at CNET talked about this concept briefly in a recent article discussing a Google presentation in Europe in which Google talked about Street View advertising.
"In the presentation, Google tossed out the notion that ads may one day appear in Street View, the feature in Google Maps that lets searchers navigate down an ever-increasing number of city and town streets around the world," writes Krazit. "Those ads would be tied into the listings in the Google Local Business Center and the Google Favorite Places program, which lets participating merchants put signs in their windows with bar codes leading to additional information or special offers."
Here are the areas where Street View is currently available:
The patent raises a lot of questions. We don’t even know for sure that Google will do this, but it certainly does seem like a possibility. Google did recently start incorporating AdSense into Google Earth, seemingly sidestepping its own guidelines for AdSense on desktop applications.
How would the advertisers of the real-life billboards feel about this? Of course billboards change over time, and likely much more frequently than Google’s imagery is updated, so there is a good chance that advertisers will find others advertising on the real estate they currently hold in the real world in Google Street View as it stands now. Still, it is hard to imagine this scenario going down without any hiccups and possibly legal challenges. It’s something to keep an eye on, and potentially a very interesting new way to advertise.
Related Articles:
> Google Ignoring Its Own Policy on Desktop AdSense?
> Google Headed To Swiss Court Over Street View
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3 Responses to Could Billboard Ads in Google Maps Street View Become a Possibility?
Hope
March 24th, 2010 at 11:40 pm
There is nothing that you can do.
ronmac60 , that is the single dumbest post I have ever seen on here.
You asked so...
March 28th, 2010 at 12:27 pm
Very little.
Under capitalism it's the wealthy who dictate government policy. The whole structure of bourgeois democracy was created to support the rich and powerful.
During periods of economic growth the rich insist that their governments leave them unfettered and let them make their profits, but when their economic system goes into meltdown, like now, they demand government intervention to protect them.
At the same time, working class people don't receive any protection and when they ask for help the rich and their media start screaming 'Communism' or 'Socialism', as if ordinary people have anything to fear from it!
It's funny how the people with the least say in how things are run are the ones who have to pay when capitalism goes into crisis.
© PD
March 29th, 2010 at 6:20 am
Usually it's pictured every month or so, as I've heard from a friend.