"Algorithms can have errors": One man's quest to purge horrific pictures from his Google results
When Googling your own business name leads to images of charred human corpses, can anything be done? Ars talks to a Spanish campground owner waging battle against Google's almighty algorithm.
View Original Article on arstechnica.com
Shared by 2 people
More from this website
I was struck by lightning yesterday—and boy am I sore | Ars Technica (arstechnica.com)
Ars technical director: "I, I, I... think we need to call 911."
We Steal Secrets: the rise and fall of WikiLeaks in classic Hollywood terms | Ars Technica (arstechnica.com)
Julian Assange stars as Walter White; the US government reprises The Chicken Man.
VMware’s Amazon-style compute cloud will live in four US data centers | Ars Technica (arstechnica.com)
VMware finds a way to wring more cash out of virtualization customers.
iOS default despair: Where Ars staff turns for better app experiences | Ars Technica (arstechnica.com)
Many times the basic isn't what you need. Luckily there are plenty of alternatives.
Password Minder: The blank notebook that got laughed out of production | Ars Technica (arstechnica.com)
An infomercial product for keeping passwords shockingly didn't find an audience.
Linux Mint 15 brings prettier desktop, new software and driver managers | Ars Technica (arstechnica.com)
One of the best Linux desktops gets better.
Survey of 12,000 studies finds strong agreement on climate change | Ars Technica (arstechnica.com)
We already knew 97% of climate scientists backed the scientific consensus.
Apple will reportedly unlock your iPhone for police, but there’s a wait list | Ars Technica (arstechnica.com)
The volume of requests has created at least a seven-week wait for law enforcement.
The laser-toting, secret Soviet satellite that never was | Ars Technica (arstechnica.com)
Rushed production, faulty code doomed a Cold War game changer 26 years ago today.
Are you obligated to point out security flaws if you’re just hired for a small job? | Ars Technica (arstechnica.com)
You don't want to throw an employee under the bus, but security holes should be fixed.
Critical Linux vulnerability imperils users, even after “silent” fix | Ars Technica (arstechnica.com)
A month after critical bug was quietly fixed, "root" vulnerability persists.

