"GPS receiver would have to also broadcast its own location."Limewater wrote: Point of Information: GPS systems cannot "see you from space." The GPS system simply provides a constant transmission of time-stamped data simultaneously from an array of satellites. Satellites broadcast their OWN position (which is constantly changing).
A GPS receiver can that can pick up signals from three or more GPS satellites can use that timestamped position data to triangulate its own position. The satellite does not even know that the receiver exists.
To use GPS for real-time tracking, that GPS receiver would have to also broadcast its own location.
Microsoft has a very good visual search. I just dropped a picture of the engine bay of my 1988 Suzuki Samurai onto both Yandex and Bing. Yandex gave me pictures of lots of engine bays. Bing did, too, but the top result was from a 1987 Samurai. I was actually really surprised at this. I mean, I knew that Micrsoft had a very good image fingerprinting/templating technology, but I didn't expect to actually get such a close match.
I understand the part where you say a gps receives a signal so I am assuming my location would still be unknown (like how a car radio operates), but if my GPS is broadcasting a signal then its trackable isn't it? and who to whom is it broadcasting the signal ?
As for "seeing me from space" maybe the GPS system does not, but if Google lets me see the world for free on Google Maps via stored woven-images I have no problem believing the US army (or any other big budget advanced country) have a secreet system in space that broadcasts live 8K video of the world. Yes, you can call me conspiracy theorists here.
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I gave that image a test on Bing and Google and it failed and Yandex got it correct. You might got lucky with that image, but to test it better I guess we have to use at least 20-30 image samples and see which visual search is the best. From my insignificantly small understanding of web search experience, although one system is more capable than the other it does not mean the worse won won't be able to get one right where the better one fails at this point a "meta search" is better.