If I put the URL in the google image search, it gives no results at all. I don't see "Search in Images".
Here's an image which gets lots of results on TinEye: https://inkscape.org/~hosr/%E2%98%85my-dream. When I put that in google images, it does give results, and a lot. But it doesn't give any results like in TinEye, which finds that exact image many times.
These are the results I get on google: https://www.google.com/search?q=https://inkscape.org/~hosr/%25E2%2598%2585my... But I still don't see "Search in Images" - just all the images.
I must be doing something wrong?
Oh, I don't doubt that there's a real person doing the posting. That's not the problem. I'm sure there is a person on the other end. What I doubt is that the image is made with Inkscape.
Thanks, brynn
-----Original Message----- From: doctormo@...2... Sent: Tuesday, May 28, 2019 3:01 PM To: brynn ; Inkscape-Docs Subject: Re: [Inkscape-docs] gallery moderation issue
Hi Brynn,
I've run the image through google image search, (go to images.google.com paste the URL in and then when it comes up with results click the link that says "Search in Images"
For the specific items, I say we leave them alone. Because if they're not linking to external sites, not using the accounts to post spam, then there's not much to do. The image is posted to us as Public Domain, which might be the oddest part, I would for instance switch the license the All Rights Reserved and then email the author's email address and ask them directly if they really meant for the image to be Public Domain. It's a way to strike up a conversation to at least know there's a real person on the other end of the email address.
Don't forget, in order to have an account, they would have needed to click on a link sent to their email address.
Best Regards, Martin Owens
On Tue, 2019-05-28 at 14:13 -0600, brynn wrote:
Can someone remind me how to do a reverse image search on
google? I've been using TinEye exclusively, but maybe using 2 different search engines would help? I know how to search images using a keyword, but not how to search using an actual image (URL).