Slashdot Mirror


Visual Search Engine Tracks Stolen Images

Barence writes "A new visual search engine could help photographers keep track of their photographs whenever, and wherever, they appear on the internet. The TinEye search engine allows users to search by uploading a picture rather than typing in a keyword. It then conducts a pixel-by-pixel search across the internet, flagging all instances of that image even if it's been cropped, merged or digitally altered in some way. It's not just for copyright enforcement though; 'it's being used by researchers who need to find where an image came from to provide attribution, even people who are trying to find out who people are in old photos.' It's currently in beta, but you can try it out."

2 of 223 comments (clear)

  1. I think everybody understands... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 5, Funny

    that the real purpose for this is to find the rest of sets ;)

  2. Logo hunting by MosesJones · · Score: 5, Informative

    So to test it out I grabbed a couple of logos (AIG, Slashdot, Bluesquare, Nike swoosh) and found that what it will do is find scaled down images or ones of lower quality but it won't handle significant colour shifts. So AIG for instance have a blue logo but sponsor Manchester United where their logo is displayed on a red background, the Nike swoosh I tested had a white background and all I got was basic black on white swoosh elements.

    Now with photos this is less of an issue as major colour shifts are unusual but it does mean that for commercial and design art its not really as applicable.

    --
    An Eye for an Eye will make the whole world blind - Gandhi