Friday, February 16, 2018







TECH





Google removes View Image from results, part of Getty settlement
Google removes View image from results, part of Getty settlement
Google Search has effectively put the world's information at our fingertips. It is, however, a two-edged sword that may have also made it easy for people to circumvent certain laws, particularly copyrights and trademarks. Google has always come under fire for that but things come to head when stock photography website Getty Images lodged a complaint against it in Europe, where Google has a track record of losing. Last week, the two reached a settlement that will see Google change some things in its image search. What do you want to see in the picture?It's a subtle change for a small button that could have a tremendous impact on users more than Google. The View Image button gave users the convenience of seeing the image by itself, without having to go to its source website, and even download the image. It has, however, been a huge headache for owners of those images or at least those who have the rights to them.Getty's complaint stems from how Google has made it easy to lift material without attribution. That is factually true since View Image does not exactly inform users of any copyright or licensing requirements. But there is another aspect to it with Google. By delivering the image Instant, users no longer have to go to the source website, which deprives them of page hits and ad revenue from visits.

So now Google is removing that button and, therefore, making it harder for users to immediately save an image. You will, of course, still be able to do so, whether you visit the original website or not. And, of course, Google and Getty would prefer that you did.

Today we're launching some changes on Google Images to help connect users and useful websites. This will include removing the View Image button. The Visit button remains, so users can see images in the context of the webpages they're on.

Google is also removing Search by Image, which could be used/abused to search for similar images without watermarks. Reverse image search still works, though, by dragging an image to the search bar, but you’ll still run into the same limitations.



J. C. T.

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