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The risk of getting banned by Google seems pretty catastrophic, so I’d be pretty worried about using this. Even if you use a “burner” Google account, who knows what they could do to link it to your primary account.
no issues yet. I'll update the post if I get in trouble :D
I'm surprised this unauthorized method uses the API at all. Years ago I animated a route with streetview images using crude browser animation and screenshots.
Say more? I don't understand the technique youre describing and its objective.
I automated clicking the Streetview arrow in a browser and taking a screenshot of a defined region of the screen to create a type of Streetview Hyperlapse. Many other tools have done it better since, at least as far back as 2013: https://tllabs.io/google-street-view-hyperlapse-youtube-vide...
Ahh I see, those hyperlapses look very cool!!

Going back to your first comment, I originally made this as part of an app with an interactive streetview component. I reused the initialization code I had as the base for this. Re-using that code also makes sure the screenshots taken would be close as what you'd see using the embedded streetview (In our project we had a bunch of remote locations without a lot of SV images, so depending on the search radius used when querying for a panorama, we could end up in vastly different places).

However, I realize that I never even considered scraping the public site, which would allow for hiding your identity by not needing an API key. I'll think about this.

Why does this have a cost?

You can get street view images from maps.google.com for free, so a scraper should be able to use the same interface for free (as long as it's either not throttled, or you can get multiple IPs or don't care about speed).

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This project uses the Panorama API. A traditional scraper will quickly run into recaptchas when scraping a Google property.