Israeli start-up Mobli Media Inc is taking on Internet giants Google Inc, Facebook Inc and Yahoo Inc with an innovative online search tool to find the latest photos and videos across social media, the company said on Monday.
Mobli, which is backed by Mexican billionaire Carlos Slim and big-name US celebrity investors Leonardo DiCaprio, Serena Williams, Lance Armstrong and Tobey Maguire, has raised more than US$90 million in funding.
The company’s EyeIn service allows users to search for pictures and video clips taken by people at concerts, sports events, demonstrations or natural disasters as they post images on Facebook, Twitter or Instagram, a unit of Facebook.
Photo: Reuters
Its real-time location-based search marks a new twist on a well-established category that typically returns a flood of photos or videos based on popularity or other ranking methods or requires users to wade through separate social media feeds to find relevant images.
Top photography sites include photograph-sharing pioneer Flickr, a unit of Yahoo; Google Image Search; and Facebook, as well as Facebook’s Instagram photograph-sharing site.
“Computers are very stupid, we need to give them very specific algorithms to detect what is the center of the event,” Mobli chief executive Moshe Hogeg said in an interview.
“We want to be the Google of crowd-generated visual content,” he said, adding that he expects the EyeIn technology to boost audience traffic and time spent on news Web sites
EyeIn is available as a search Web site, a downloadable mobile app or as an add-on for publishers to install within their own Web sites to complement text and other information. Partners for the add-on include AOL Inc’s Huffington Post.
Mobli expects to share revenue with publishers from advertising as well as earn money from ads on its own site.
The company started as a rival to Instagram and attracted 20 million users. That was the stepping stone to building the search engine over a three-year period, with Hogeg recruiting experts in computer vision and natural language processing from the defense industry.
Hogeg said the biggest challenge was the relevancy of the results and how EyeIn determines which of the plethora of available photographs are interesting.
Weighting what is important based on the location of an event is crucial to finding relevant photos, he said.
“If you want to see photos from the NBA finals, you will probably like to see photos of players and less of the crowd,” Hogeg said.
EyeIn can scan a story on a news Web site to calculate what the event is about and create an album that will update itself as the event unfolds.
Mobli plans to partner with some of Slim’s companies, although Hogeg would not disclose names. Slim, who owns telecoms group America Movil, is the largest shareholder of New York Times Co.
Other investors in Mobli include Chinese Internet firm Tencent Holdings Ltd (騰訊) cofounder Vic Lee (李海翔) and Kazakh businessman Kenges Rakishev, who invested US$22 million. Other investor stakes were not disclosed.
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