Classroom Teacher

Who Is That Girl? Using Photos on Blogs, Part 4

Who is that girl at the gym? Using internet tools to look up stock photosWho is that girl? Who is that guy? Is she a model? Are these real people or is this just stock photography?

This post is part of our series on using photos on blogs:

Today will be talking about some internet tools that you can use to figure out who is that girl / person. That way, you can figure out whether the images used on a website are paid models, or real people. Teachers can find their own examples of websites that use stock photography (to teach critical thinking skills when viewing images on websites.)

This post was written using Dragon NaturallySpeaking voice-recognition software.

Who is that girl / guy / person?

Students need to think critically about the images they see online. Although older students might talk about cyber safety, critical thinking images that we see online is an important media literacy skill.

A picture is worth 1000 words and science documentaries, medical websites, political websites, and educational websites may use stock photography (i.e. paid models) to get their point across.

Here are two online Google tools…

Using Google Goggles to figure out who is that girl / guy / person

Google Goggles is a very cool feature that lets you take a photo with your smart phone and search Google based on that image.

Download the Google Search – Google iPad / iPhone app (or android app) and all of a sudden you can snap photos of people in ads, billboards, or posters and you can see if that image is a stock photo. (If the exact same photo shows up on a million websites or in a photo agency website, then chances are, these people are paid models.)

Using Google Image Search to figure out who is that girl / guy / person.

Google now lets you search based on an image.

What about student/teacher privacy? Who is that girl? Can you search people based on a photo of them?

You can use Google image search or Google Goggles to look up stock photos, because Google is looking for that identical photo online. . It won’t, however, find other photos with the same model. (You can also use Google image search to find people impersonating you if they’re using the exact same profile picture as you.)

Now that you can start a Google search using an image, it raises some very creepy questions about privacy and stocking.

The answer, right now, is no.

But the technology exists. CBC ran an article in July 2011 about Google Face recognition and privacy concerns: Eric Schmidt, the executive chairman of Google said that Google had “developed facial recognition software as part of its Google Goggles product, but withheld the technology because of privacy concerns.”

Even creepier, this technology could all be working in the background. A few months ago, the latest version of Google Goggles came out for android powered phones. If you opt in, Google Goggles can automatically search the images from your camera, and display search results.

Now the administrator in the Google Mobile blog said on September 15, 2011 that Google Goggles doesn’t do facial recognition – Google Goggles would only find people with similar hair color, but it wouldn’t recognize the person or associate a name with the person in the photo. But we know that the facial recognition technology exists.

Food for thought.

Photo Credit: Big Stock Photo – image-13618826/stock-photo-group-of-people-cycling-in-a-gym

This post was written using Dragon NaturallySpeaking 11.5 Premium Wireless. What is Dragon NaturallySpeaking?

[adrotate block=”3″]
  • There are 933 words in this post. Dragon made 14 word errors. So, we had an accuracy of 98.5% in this document.
  • If you include punctuation and capitalization errors, Dragon made an additional 4 punctuation and capitalization errors. So, we had an accuracy of 98.1% in this document.

[stextbox id=”info” caption=”Example of Word Errors made by Dragon NaturallySpeaking 11.5″ collapsing=”true” collapsed=”true”]

  • where to get free photos = where did free photos
  • Who is that girl? = With that girl?
  • is this stock photography = is the stock photography

[/stextbox]

[stextbox id=”info” caption=”Example of Punctuation / Capitalization Errors made by Dragon NaturallySpeaking 11.5″ collapsing=”true” collapsed=”true”]

  • Google Googles – Google goggles

[/stextbox]

 

Exit mobile version