A priori (that is, without seeing the taxi's colour), we would assume that the most likely colour is green with probability $0.9$ and that the taxi is unlikely to be coloured blue (its probability is only $0.1$). But now we obtain a new piece of information: we seem to "see" a blue taxi. Given this knowledge, the new probability that the taxi is blue becomes: \begin{align*} &\text{Pr}[\text{actually B} \mid \text{seems B}] \\\ &= \frac{\text{Pr}[\text{actually B}] \cdot \text{Pr}[\text{seems B} \mid \text{actually B}]}{\text{Pr}[\text{actually B}] \cdot \text{Pr}[\text{seems B} \mid \text{actually B}] + \text{Pr}[\text{actually G}] \cdot \text{Pr}[\text{seems B} \mid \text{actually G}]} \\\ &= \frac{0.1 \cdot 0.8}{0.1 \cdot 0.8 + 0.9 \cdot 0.2} \\\ &= \frac{8}{8 + 18} \\\ &= \frac{4}{13} \\\ &= 0.3076\ldots \end{align*} Hence, the new probability of being blue increased from $0.1$ to $\approx 0.3$, but it is still more likely that the taxi is green.