Google Reverse Image Search

Search with an image on Google You can learn more about an image or the objects around you with a reverse image search. For example, you can take a photo of a. Search with an image on Google You can learn more about an image or the objects around you with a reverse image search. For example, you can take a photo of a plant and use it to search for info or other similar images. Use a reverse Google Image search to check if the image in a meme actually comes from a different event altogether. This phenomenon can be hard to detect without some special skills or tools.

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How Does Google Reverse Image Search Work?
UPDATED SEPTEMBER 2020

As an SEO/PPC company, we’ve seen countless websites with the same overused stock photos. Eventually, it became a game for us! “Spot the Headset Girl” and “Where’s the Serious Guy Today.”

We thought it would make a killer interactive contest. Unfortunately, before we had a chance to implement our contest, Google launched the reverse image search feature.

So much for our game.

However, lemons… lemonade.
Que sera sera.
Whatever.

We thought we’d take this opportunity to show you How To Use the Reverse Image Search and demonstrate how it rendered our contest useless.

Let’s use Headset Girl as our example.

1. First, take a screenshot of the picture you want to hunt down and save it to your desktop.

2. Visit www.google.com and click “Images” at the top right.

3. Click the tiny camera graphic in the search box. This allows you to search by image.

4. Now you have two options: Either drag the image from a website into the search bar, or upload your own image. We uploaded Headset Girl since we previously saved it to our desktop.

Here’s a sampling of the companies that thought headset girl would properly reflect their businesses:

Headset girl – one of the hardest working women in stock photography. What stock photos do you see abused across the internet?

© Provided by CNET Use a reverse Google Image search to check if the image in a meme comes from a different event altogether. Brett Pearce/CNET

Photos sometimes live double lives on the internet. Scammers might steal your social media photos and use them with fake online identities. Or scammers might target you by using someone else's photos, claiming to be someone they're not. Or a provocateur might paste a picture from a news story into a meme where it's taken out of context.

© Brett Pearce/CNET

Use a reverse Google Image search to check if the image in a meme actually comes from a different event altogether.

This phenomenon can be hard to detect without some special skills or tools. That's what a reverse image search is for. This search engine tool gives you the power to spot scams, debunk false news and find out when someone is using your images for their own gain.

You can run a reverse image search in a few different ways, but the end result is a list of websites where the photo or image is displayed, with a link and description. It can also give you a list of related images. Although these results are often hit or miss, they might show you where images of the same thing shot from a different angle are posted.

Here's how to run a reverse image search, and why you might want to consider it.

Google reverse image search on phone© Provided by CNET A quick drag-and-drop can help you separate fact from fiction. Graphic by Pixabay/Illustration by CNET

How to run a reverse image search

There are a few options for how to do a reverse image search. First, open Google Images in your Safari, Firefox or Chrome web browser.

Option 1: Click on the image and hold down. Then drag it to the Google Images search field in another window.

Option 2: Take a screenshot of the image and drag that file into the search field. (You can also upload the file from the Google Images search bar, if you prefer.)

Option 3: Right-click on the image and select Open image in another window. Copy the URL and then paste into the Google Images search field.

Reverse Image Search

Option 4: If you're using Chrome, right-click on the image and select Search Google for image.

The results will tell you what other contexts the photo has appeared in. That'll help you spot multiple postings trying to sell the same object (like this pig chair, which isn't for sale but has appeared repeatedly on Craigslist). It'll also help you spot duplicate real estate listings, which may not have been posted by the same people.

How to run a reverse image search on your phone

For the quickest and most readable results, you'll want to be on a desktop web browser to run a reverse image search. The same search just isn't as straightforward to pull off on mobile. These are the simplest approaches you can try:

Option 1: In the mobile Chrome browser, you can hold down on an image and then select Search Google for this image.

Google Reverse Image Search On Phone

Option 2: Hold down on the photo in your mobile browser and select the option that lets you copy the photo (Copy or Copy URL, for example). That puts the photo's URL onto your clipboard. Then paste the URL in the Google Images search bar.

You can also use the Google app, which lets you upload or take pictures of images. However, CNET found the results to be very spotty when trying to find the origin of a photo.

Why you might want to run a reverse image search

First, you can use a reverse image search to spot fraud and scams. Going on a first date? Run the person's Tinder profile picture through a reverse image search to see if the photo is associated with anyone else. Buying a product from a stranger on the internet? Do a reverse image search for the picture of the item to find out if it's been posted by other people.

Second, you can check to see if anyone is reusing your photos. This could be for a variety of reasons. Maybe they're using your face on Tinder, or maybe they're stealing photos of your crafts from Pinterest and claiming your creations as their own. If you have photos you don't want repurposed by strangers, it might make sense to run them through a reverse image search now and then.

Finally, you might want to win an argument. When someone posts an image with a news story that just doesn't sound right to you, you could try to look it up on Snopes. But the website, which fact-checks news stories, rumors and memes that fly around the internet, can't investigate everything. That's when it's time to open up Google.

What to do about fake or misleading posts

You can report a misleading or false meme to the social media platform you found it on. You can also report things like scam dating profiles, bogus for-sale posts and fake rental listings to the websites where they're hosted, as well as to the FTC. Steps for reporting the posts will be different for each website.

Google Reverse Image Search Pc

You can also let people know they've posted something misleading, which they may have done unwittingly. You may be in for an argument, but you'll have facts to back you up.