moqub's library of things Blog Archive Try: TinEye
The link was already waiting to become. Noticed for a while in my delicious list When tidying today is the day. I take a look at TinEye, the reverse image search. To see where images are used, you can upload the image to TinEye (or the link where the image is required) and TinEye finds where the original image came from, how it is used, how it has changed and where you can find images with higher resolution. TinEye is the first search engine picmonkey for the web that images are used for identification instead of keywords.
I take the acid test and first try some pictures that I made myself. No result is due. I have to choose an image that I know it is reused. I take a picture of a Waterhouse painting that I find on a blog of a person unknown to me. I cut and paste the URL into the search bar and this is the result: picmonkey
32 hits on the same image, with the URL of where it is found. Sometimes the color of the image is changed or the image contained in a text field, but that does not matter, TinEye finds him. Upstairs in the search results picmonkey appear the images with the most similarity, the less the image appears the lower this is reflected in the results.
Even more convenient is it to download so you get a search for an image to start. With a right click the plugin Currently TinEye searches 1,013,140,121 images on the web, but every day come here more picture at.
In order to make use of TinEye, you must register (free) but for me that's worth. Especially if you have the idea that your images are sometimes misused somewhere. Please search with TinEye and you know it.
Yesterday Marina and I went on an adventure in Nijmegen. We started the day at the old factory Honig. According to the website, the new hot spot for the next [...] Read the rest
workshop hand lettering August 10th, 2014 | Moqub wonder rooms in the municipal den-haag August 10th, 2014 | Moqub innovation doedag May 23rd, 2014 | Moqub Liber Architecture Group - Day 4 May 9th, 2014 | Moqub Liber Architecture Group - Day 3 May 8th, 2014 | Moqub
The link was already waiting to become. Noticed for a while in my delicious list When tidying today is the day. I take a look at TinEye, the reverse image search. To see where images are used, you can upload the image to TinEye (or the link where the image is required) and TinEye finds where the original image came from, how it is used, how it has changed and where you can find images with higher resolution. TinEye is the first search engine picmonkey for the web that images are used for identification instead of keywords.
I take the acid test and first try some pictures that I made myself. No result is due. I have to choose an image that I know it is reused. I take a picture of a Waterhouse painting that I find on a blog of a person unknown to me. I cut and paste the URL into the search bar and this is the result: picmonkey
32 hits on the same image, with the URL of where it is found. Sometimes the color of the image is changed or the image contained in a text field, but that does not matter, TinEye finds him. Upstairs in the search results picmonkey appear the images with the most similarity, the less the image appears the lower this is reflected in the results.
Even more convenient is it to download so you get a search for an image to start. With a right click the plugin Currently TinEye searches 1,013,140,121 images on the web, but every day come here more picture at.
In order to make use of TinEye, you must register (free) but for me that's worth. Especially if you have the idea that your images are sometimes misused somewhere. Please search with TinEye and you know it.
Yesterday Marina and I went on an adventure in Nijmegen. We started the day at the old factory Honig. According to the website, the new hot spot for the next [...] Read the rest
workshop hand lettering August 10th, 2014 | Moqub wonder rooms in the municipal den-haag August 10th, 2014 | Moqub innovation doedag May 23rd, 2014 | Moqub Liber Architecture Group - Day 4 May 9th, 2014 | Moqub Liber Architecture Group - Day 3 May 8th, 2014 | Moqub
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