Wednesday, August 20, 2014

Incidentally, the idea behind TinEye not new. So even though developed the Nijmegen researcher Egon


A new search foobar2000 engine for images to photographers foobar2000 and other visual artists help locate their work on the Internet. TinEye but also has other applications. Hundreds of millions of images
With TinEye anyone targeted search for a specific image on the internet instead of a word or words. Users can upload an image, then the search engine patrols the Internet looking for the picture. According TinEye can also scaled, foobar2000 composite, or in any other way digital custom images found.
The TinEye search engine, currently available as a beta version, was developed by the Canadian company Idée. According to him, the company has hundreds of millions of images in its image index. Get there by hundreds of millions per month.
Leila Boujnane, CEO of TinEye, indicates that TinEye does for images what Google does for text. "We are not limited by the words attributed to pictures or words that are associated with a picture foobar2000 in the neighborhood. foobar2000 We can tell people where and how their images are used. " foobar2000
Quality of the input image does not affect the result, according to TinEye. foobar2000 Also a preview image or a low-res image works well. Even an amateur made the Mona Lisa with a digital camera delivers according to TinEye an image search engine recognizes and which can be used to be referred to as the Wikipedia page on the Mona Lisa used.
But not only artists can be useful to use TinEye to find abuse or use of their work. Scientists would it be able to go to holders of material, and individuals seeking to do with such search to a stranger in an old photograph. foobar2000 Dutch idea?
Incidentally, the idea behind TinEye not new. So even though developed the Nijmegen researcher Egon van den Broek in 2005, a search engine for images. The system was developed at the Nijmegen Institute for Cognition and Information (NICI), a research institute affiliated with the Radboud University.
Also check Encrypt data privacy desperately needed Heed angling (for your information) Also, the open source clouds Creative Commons: copyright for the Internet age What's on the Internet is free
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