NY State comptroller's turn

Sunday, September 25, 2005 (08:27 UTC)

It's the turn of New York state comptroller Alan Hevesi to jump aboard Google-Earth-aids-terrorists bandwagon, reports the New York Post. In a letter to Google CEO Eric Schmidt, Hevesi says he was alerted by Queens assemblyman Michael Gianaris, whose discovery of Google Earth was previously blogged here.

Hevesi feels the need to mention that he is the sole trustee of the NY state pension fund, and that it has $25 million invested in Google stock.

From the article:

Hevesi told The Post, "Since 9/11, we have to be much more security conscious . . . I have asked Google to make sure that making satellite pictures available has been vetted by the appropriate government agencies."

Which is weird, because in the letter to Schmidt he wrote that:

"I understand that you have contacted the Department of Defense to inquire about any national security issues that could arise from the use of this product."

What we've got here is a bunch of New York politicians who can't get their way, so they begin throwing around the idea that they could sell their shares as a threat. What a clever idea. Imagine if it worked. All South Korea or Thailand would have to do is buy Google shares through intermediaries, then threaten to dump them if Earth doesn't obscure a proffered list of sites.

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Comments

Of course any shares traded in Google would just be grabbed right away so all this would be for nothing. Talk about being ignorant on top of being ignorant.

Posted by: James Fee at 5:32 UTC, September 26, 2005

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Ogle Earth documents how Google Earth and other neogeographical tools are affecting science and geopolitics. By Stefan Geens. Email me.
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