Wow, I did not know about the mouse tracking thing.Consider it from the bot perspective: a bot scrapes input fields on a page and enters information to try to make an account. The 'I am not a robot' is a javascript applet instead of a simple plaintext field, so it is far harder to script an input. You aren't just dumping a name, an email, and a password from a database of options (which is how bots operate).
Additionally (and this isn't as well-known), webpages often track your mouse movements, so the movement of your mouse prior to clicking the button is taken into account and compared against a massive database of typical user inputs. If the cursor appears out of thin air exactly over the button, it would seem suspicious.
In other words, draw a dick with your cursor each time before clicking.
Somebody explain this to me
It's actually pretty easy to make a robot emulate the way a human would click that box.
That's why I have to complete a fucking puzzle everytime I click the dam thing.
Yeah, I could probably put together something in an afternoon. Add a random element to the starting position, direction and acceleration of the cursor to keep the script guessing. Add a delay between mouse down and up. There must be more to it than I'm assuming.
Yeah, these last 2 posts also seem true. Unless it's able to detect the action of an actual physical mouse click vs a 'programmed' one, I can't think of any reason why it's complete foolproof.Yeah you just need enough randomness of where the mouse starts, how it moves, where it lands, the time it takes, etc, that the system wouldn't be able to notice.
But I'm human and I have to complete the "find waldo" thing everytime anyway, so I what's the point of this button in the first place.
It doesn't matter anymore if it takes an AI browser the same amount of time as a human to extract those information.Yeah, these last 2 posts also seem true. Unless it's able to detect the action of an actual physical mouse click vs a 'programmed' one, I can't think of any reason why it's complete foolproof.
I'm quite shocked when it's only the click box that allows me to get thru.
Eventually I can also see AI getting past captchas.
doesn't seem like anything to me
These violent delights have violent ends
-_-Yeah, I could probably put together something in an afternoon. Add a random element to the starting position, direction and acceleration of the cursor to keep the script guessing. Add a delay between mouse down and up. There must be more to it than I'm assuming.
-_-
No, you cannot bypass it that easily. Google collects mouse movement data, along with all of the data that the browser gives from the machine. After that, they feed the data to a machine learning generated model which has been built after evaluating billions of similar events to determine if you are a robot. The model is highly accurate, and if you are able to bypass it, chances are you have already made millions since you can easily profit of such techniques.
I have experience in traffic fraud analysis, and the individuals creating synthetic traffic cannot just program robot traffic on top of mere servers processes anymore, they have to actually clone the full devices and program against the actual input drivers; click farms are a well known business.
CVNT-HNice try Cunth OR SHOULD I CALL YOU C-U9T#
CVNT-H
NoNo one is forcing you to make these threads, t-bone. Stop it,
Google collects mouse movement data, along with all of the data that the browser gives from the machine.
Yes. Stop it or I'll t-bone your cunth
is dat one of dem retard detectorsThere was a recent site that required you to rotate images. I had to give up, I couldn't figure out how to do it.