TinEye Reverse Image Search (Context menu)
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brynster77 last edited by
Didn't work for me. Searched on an image from a news story and said 0 results from 39.5 billion images. Did same with google and found instantly 6 image matches even with same image at different sizes. Not very impressed.
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mark2090 last edited by mark2090
@brynster77
I have found the same thing happen at Google images, not just TinEye.At times, the image is not found at Google, but found at TinEye and visa versa. I use both sometimes to see if there are different results.
Keep in mind, some people who make their websites block crawlers from indexing their images on purpose, to stop others from stealing their images.
It could happen that TinEye was blocked from indexing the image(s) but not Google. Either way, never depend on Google or TinEye 100% to locate or match an image, ... yet both provide excellent image search tools.
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A Former User last edited by
Every time I use it, it says "The requested URL's length exceeds the capacity limit for this server."
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mark2090 last edited by
@numlockted
Don't use the image URL, instead download the image to your desktop and then drag it into Tineye page or the Google Images page (drag it over the search box of either).URL's can be problematic, especially when they are too long or contain characters that create issues with servers. Also, some servers are purposely configured to block certain URL requests to stop excess use of their bandwidth and for security reasons. This is why using just the image as I described above is the best way to do an image search.
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ideeinc last edited by
@numlockted
mark2090's advice is good. In my experience, often when you get this error it's because the image isn't a URL to a data file, but a data URL that embeds all of the image data right in the address. Google tends to use these quite a bit on their pages. In these cases, downloading the image and using it to search may be your best option.Happy searching!
TinEye
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mark2090 last edited by mark2090
@numlockted
ideenic has made a good point which I forgot about.It is true, many websites now use a data scheme or a data attribute in their HTML source code of a web page to embed images, and "data attributes" tend to include various script methods. This can make downloading the image problematic. So, if the standard "right-click / save image as" command does not work, then take a screenshot and extract the specific image from the screenshot using an image editor like MSPaint, saving the image using the common format of JPG or PNG.
To see what ideeinc speaks about, you can read more here:
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Data_URI_scheme -
tony-somervell last edited by
Great, useful app. Agree with others' helpful comments and Google complementing TinEye (Lens is excellent and can scan text btw!)
I have always used the website, often with a screenshot of image I'm looking for. Will try the app to see if it's any easier.
Thanks for excellent app!