By Peter Cochrane, 21 June 2007 11:22
COMMENT
Written in Orlando, Florida and dispatched to silicon.com the same day via a free LAN connection in my hotel
I have just had one of those 'blue murder' weeks that occur now and again where I seem to be travelling every day and have one meeting after another non-stop.
And as usual my memory is suffering. I can remember everything about a meeting a few days ago - the conversation, conclusions and action points - but for some reason I just cannot put a face to the name.
I'd be worried about this recurring phenomenon if it were not for the fact that people 20 years my junior report the same problem. As far as I can tell it seems to result from mental overload and accumulating tiredness brought on by the increasingly chaotic world of work.
Given that I have good internet access and some time to spare, I decide to do an image search to help recover my memory loss. I type the name of the individual whose face I cannot remember in an image search engine and hit search. Bingo! In less than half a second I have a picture of my missing guest and my memory is restored.
I don't know why I should feel surprised by this outcome but I do. And so I decide to start searching, at random, for people I know. Running down my professional address book I score a positive outcome more than 80 per cent of the time, with the majority showing up on the first search page in less than a second. A proportion (say around 30 per cent) takes a little more effort and around 10 per cent are hard work. After that I give up!
The biggest surprise during this short experiment was the number of non-professional people I know who appear on the net. Also the pictures reveal a really interesting trail of connectivity. By back-tracking to the website where the image appears, it is possible to discover much about the individual concerned - where they work, where they travel, what they do, who their colleagues are, a selection of family pictures. It seems endless!
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It strikes me that anyone with efficient search technology could assemble a complete(ish) portfolio on most of us in minutes. But here's the kicker: the validity of the picture acquired isn't a problem if you know the person but if you do not know the individual you sometimes have to work really hard to verify that fact.
I'm not going to discuss the obvious implications of all this here but suggest you give it a try, search for people you know and see what happens. Let me know how it goes by posting a Reader Comment!



Comments
There are 20 comments. Join the discussion
1. Karen Challinor
just had a quick look for myself on the web and found a younger and prettier version living in a different area
I'm probably doing her career prospects no good at all with my somewhat outspoken posts on here
2. Mark Kobayashi-Hillary
I'm lucky that my name is unique, that really helps with the image search!
3. Jim Price
There's hundreds of 'me' - but one or two extra keywords soon sorts the wheat from the chaff - though I didn't find a picture of the real me. I shall have to speak to my friends at ETSI!
4. David Palmer
I had to wade through six pages of DP's to find myself. (But since most of those were for 'World Champion David Palmer' and 'President David Palmer' I wasn't downhearted!!
I remember about 10 years ago a friend Googled me by typing in 'David Palmer teacher' and it worked!
5. Emma Wood
Difficult finding me at all with my new and more anonymous married surname of Wood but had no problems with the old one, Walkley.
Having said that the first Wood listing was for a senior marketing lecturer at a top university but the Walkley listings were mostly for a company I was made redundant from over 18 months ago!
My husband's name, Kevin, is an altogether more difficult prospect!!
6. anonymous
It seems I died in 1917 - thank God I was spared all this IT stuff...
David
7. Richard
Was I the first to 'comment' on a Silicon article?
A quick web search revealed a Silicon web-page dated 1st Jan 1970, showing one of my 'comments.'
It was obviously even more prescient than my normal comments; this 'comment' posted so long before "Silicon News" was even founded.
ps. Can you really believe all you find on the web?
8. anonymous
My search came up with nothing and my name is pretty unusual. Even text searches for my name only pick up coments I've left at Silicon.com!
9. Roy Corneloues
I too have a unique name which makes searches less random...
However apart from the few links from my old days at Nantucket (the Clipper people), most of the images come back from a social networking site I used to frequent. However most of the images were not of me, but of my network!!!!
Bizarre...
Roy
10. Kevin Hill
(Un)fortunately I share my name with a popular american TV Lawyer show so finding myself is nigh-on impossible.
11. John Stormes
Peter
This may be the case for people like yourself with fairly high profile careers.
Despite a fairy unique name, I found four mentions - a previous comment to Silicon, a couple of letters to a newspaper, a list of attendees at a computing seminar, and a credit on a web site for a company I left in 2001.
I tried some of my colleagues names and got no results at all.
12. Stuart Fawcett
But don't we want people to find us and remember us. Isn't this what the llikes of facebook is all about where we control the images of ourselves, effectively marketing our own image. Perhaps i need a facebook consultant to ensure my image is doing me justice! It surprises me that the professional "linked in" site are not yet doing this also.
Were already used to turning down unwanted commercial advertising and direct calls so turning down another group will soon also become normal.
13. Peter Cochrane
Karen = Nicely put! How do you know when you have found the right Karem, Peter, James etc...? Peter
14. Peter Cochrane
Jim = Search engines are so poor that you can never be sure. I had trouble finding some people until I hit on the right word sequence. Might be worth trying again? Peter
15. Peter Cochrane
Anonymous Hong Kong
So even if we died before IT we can still appear.....interesting!
Peter
16. Peter Cochrane
Richard = You should never believe anything you read, see or hear on any medium from clay tablets and on....Peter
17. Peter Cochrane
Anonymous Singapore
It looks as though you may truly be ananymous!
Peter
18. Peter Cochrane
Roy = It seems we all leave an electronic trail of bits as we pass thro....Peter
19. Peter Cochrane
John = It is far from uniform that's for sure. See comments from other here - all reporting varying levels of success. Peter
20. Peter Cochrane
Stuart = Opinions vary on this one. I'm passive - I really don't mind being seen or found. Others are violently opposed.
A lot just don't like surprises! Peter