(Author here) IIUC you're saying that 707133f-a should be at 5th Ave & 9th Street, not 5th Ave & Union Street? Can you say more about why? The text on the back of the first image says "Union St. Station, 5th Ave," which is how it winds up at there. On the other hand, the NYPL page[1] titles the image "Union St. - 18th St."
(I briefly got excited that there might be a street sign _in_ the photo, but if you zoom way in it says "DENTIST")
+1 to 1940s.nyc. Very different photos — those are were taken for tax assessment, the ones on OldNYC were taken to document the city as it changed. The photographer had an arrangement where he'd get tips from demolition crews, and go shoot buildings before they were gone forever.
I'm pretty sure both are correct at Union St and 5th Ave. The Manhattan Savings Bank building (left edge in both photos) is still there, and fairly distinct.
you're right, this is actually correctly placed! I was confusing the orientation. I live right around there and recognize the M&T bank in the photo on the left, so it can't be down by 9th
An elephant in the room is that if you have too much data to process without AI, you have too many results to check for correctness when they come out of the AI.
This has been true since before LLMs, but now so many more people and use cases are enabled so much more easily. People are undisciplined and quick to take short term gains and handwave the correctness.
It is less of a problem if the output is explicitly marked as AI-generated and unverified, so people can treat it as a rough first draft. But mix AI output with well-vetted human-reviewed data, and you've basically made your entire data set worthless.
I'm a big fan of Pastvu: go yo the "gallery" view, choose one of the "-stan" former soviet republics, set the date filter yo 1986-1996 and enjoy nostalgia from a parallel world.
(I briefly got excited that there might be a street sign _in_ the photo, but if you zoom way in it says "DENTIST")
+1 to 1940s.nyc. Very different photos — those are were taken for tax assessment, the ones on OldNYC were taken to document the city as it changed. The photographer had an arrangement where he'd get tips from demolition crews, and go shoot buildings before they were gone forever.
[1]: https://digitalcollections.nypl.org/items/5a5e06a0-c539-012f...