The intro suggests that they were Moray eels, though, and searching around it looks like one of those terms that are of ambiguous origin.
Degloving
debriding videos
“sebaceous cyst images”
Just saying.
Here’s one image search that really frightened me.
I decided to do an image search for Sharon Tate, considering she was a sexy, attractive woman.
I had forgotten to think of another aspect of her life. I am surprised that Google allowed crime scene photos to be part of that search. :mad:
I clicked it off immediately. :mad:
Just as a warning - don’t do that image search.
Congenital syphilis. Just don’t.
Nice terrorists promptly send a communiqué taking responsibility and follow a standard color code for bomb wires, just to give you a sporting chance.
A few years ago, I took courses in 3D animation and modeling. In one class, we drew names of monsters out of a hat to construct models of. The instructor told us to google images for references. I drew the Basilisk, which is a combination of a snake and a hen.
When I googled “hen,” I got all sorts of pictures of tentacle porn. I wondered out loud how that could happen. A classmate told me the search engine auto-completed to “hentai,” which means tentacle porn. Apparently it’s really popular.
[Sheldon]How to excite 12-year-old girls[/sheldon]
And we don’t even want to consider the YouTube offerings. Trust me on that one.
Okay admit it: how many of you googled some of these things?
I did a “what is” Google search, definitely not any image searches
“Iron fence beheading” or variants thereof. I encountered the photos on Snopes, and I strongly recommend not Googling at work or during lunch.
I have a strong stomach, but I can probably live without searching “brain avulsion” or “avulsion” ever again.
Do medical students get eased into the grotesque injuries and diseases gradually, or do instructors like to horrify them at the very beginning?
No way, uh-uh. I have also not seen goatse, lemon party or tub girl. Thanks, buddha_david, for the descriptions. I really don’t ever want to see any of that (well, maybe meat spin just for laughs)but once they were mentioned I just *had *to know what they are.
I pretty much stay away from graphic images, which is surprising considering my love for all things horror. I think the grossest images I’ve seen were on Find a Grave and most of you would probably consider them tame but they were pretty disturbing (including the Black Dahlia murder pictures).
If you’re doing breed research prior to adopting a dog (which is a smart idea), never do a google image search for Galgo unless you have a strong stomach. Not quite as bad, but still worrisome is image searching for greyhound.
I was kind of shocked the time I googled my last name to see if I (or really, who) would come up. The page was full of people injured by a particular species of animal that shares my last name! Google images is full of horrible stuff, no matter how innocent the search!
I strongly recommend not doing research on your elderly mom’s computer about medical topics such as syphilis or icky prostate conditions (job related, her computer was handy, I forgot to block the cookies or delete the browsing history). The ads and links that kept popping up for days afterwards were disturbing even to me.
The one time I googled “goatse”, I did not get the original photograph, but a page full of rather comical tributes. My favorite was a picture of Keanu Reeves with a perturbed expression on his face, and the caption, “If Goatse’s ring was a wedding ring . . . does that mean his wife took the picture?”
I can only guess what would happen if you googled things like “murder techniques” or “how to get rid of a body” or things like that and have some calamity befall your significant other.
Do not google Lattie McGee. Trust me on this one.