Face Off: Facial Recognition Search Engines

November 12th, 2007 by Charles S. Knight
Posted in In Beta, Innovations, Verticals | 7 Comments »

Mondays on AltSearchEngines we examine a particular Vertical, and this week the hottest Vertical category is Image Search, and especially the sub-category of facial recognition search engines.

Today was the partial launch of EyeAlike, which matches up faces with similar faces.  It works is two directions.  On the top level, you supply the image of someone that you find attractive, and EyeAlike scans thousands of faces from Online Dating sites, and gives you a real person, someone seeking a date, that is very similar to the photo you uploaded.  This is meant to be a serious endeavour.

One the bottom row, it is just the opposite, you supply the face of a real person, perhaps your own, and EyeAlike scans thousand of celebrities and shows you which celebrity that person looks like!  This is really just meant to be a novelty.

To access the site, you will have to request a password as long as it’s in Private Beta.


 Mugr is another project getting a bit of attention lately. 

“Our face detection is surprisingly good, but recognition in the face of arbitrary background noise is a difficult challenge.”

“In case anyone’s reading and concerned about their privacy, let me be very clear about certain things: 
Mugr is an opt-in service.”

“If you don’t sign up, we can’t find you. Period.  Face recognition does not work without photos.  If you sign up and don’t upload a picture, we can’t find you in photos.  We find you using your name as well as through your tags and links, but not via your photo.”

“If you upload photos, add tags and links, and make connections with people these are the things that you cannot set to private. Everything else, you have complete control over. Of course, you’ve got control over tags, links, and photos as well— you can choose to add them or not.  We will not be spidering photos from the Internet to seed our searches.” 

As for other new Facial Search engines,  one would be Viewdle, a facial recognition search engine that we covered recently.  Viewdle claims to be able to search for faces within a video stream.

Viewdle is a facial-recognition digital media platform for indexing and searching videos. Viewdle automatically looks inside the video, frame-by-frame, to create a real-time index of true on-screen appearances.

If you want to experiment with Viewdle, you should go to the REUTERS Labs test site.


Since I can’t wait to see her movie, The Brave One, I searched for actress Jodie Foster.

And here we are, Viewdle’s Facial Recognition Search Engine:

PolarRose looks for still images that have been tagged by other PolarRose users. The Polar Rose browser plugin for FireFox lets you discover who’s in any public photo. The browser plugin is currently in private beta so you need to sign upto be notified. The plugin adds their signature rose on all public photos where it detects a face.

Pluggd looks for words and images in audio and video files by their heat map signatures. SeeHere uses an intuitive heat map interface to let you search inside a video and jump right to the parts that interest you.




Imagery has only appeared so because it’s new reincarnation, Domburi, is undergoing labor pains. I’m starting afresh, new name, new domain, new engine. After all, Imagery was always meant as a mere proof-of-concept and it was only with its onslaught reception that I realized I was on to something.



Finally, there’s Facesearch, one of the first facial searches (it crops out everything but the face).

Search the Blogosphere with Blogoat Blog Search

November 12th, 2007 by Charles S. Knight
Posted in In Beta, Newcomers, Reviews | No Comments »



Blogoat is a bit of a mystery – try it out!



Thanks to Jonas for this great tip!

Search Engine of the Day: the Re@dle meme!

November 12th, 2007 by Charles S. Knight
Posted in In Beta, Reviews | 1 Comment »

The Re@dle meme’s mission is to filter the web for you. Built with automatically updated “News Pages”, Readle lists up to 100 headlines and excerpts from the latest and most popular News and Blog posts on every page. You can read the latest about Tech, Gadgets, News, Google, Microsoft, AppleSocial Networks, Web 2.0, Yahoo, and much more that’s hot right now in the Blogosphere. The pages are updated automatically within 20-30 minutes intervals. Some headlines climb, and some fall off. Use search for older headlines.  You will never again miss what’s hot on the web because you don’t have time to read through all the RSS Feeds you subscribe to.

Readle is a search engine that indexes handpicked, quality web sites.  The goal is to create a search engine that finds the interesting stuff and sorts out the less interesting.  Who’s doing the handpicking?  Stefan Svartling.  He has a network of websites called the Svartling Network.  You’ll see links to all of his web sites in his network at the footer of his pages.

Just click on one of the categories and enjoy!