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Sarah Novotny is a contributing editor at Adotas. Sarah grew up in San Jose, California. Her educational and professional career have taken her to both Los Angeles and New York City where she received a B.F.A. from NYU. As a writer, Sarah has free-lanced for various publications focusing primarily on traditional advertising and media reviews. When not writing and editing for Adotas, Sarah is continuing her acting career in various theatrical and film/television productions.

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Web Site Spammers are Winning the War!

Written on
June 11th 2007
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by Sarah Novotny  |
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dart1.jpgCaptchas, are thoseform verificationpuzzles web sites use to keep automated programs of spammers out of their sites are supposed to be easy for people…generally speaking. They usually present a series of distorted numbers and letters that identify an actual human being using the site as opposed to a program.

However there is a problem arising. With spammers creating more intelligent programs, companies are making more and more difficult puzzles to keep out the troublemakers. Unfortunately this is also keeping out the innocent bystanders as well.

Captchas are becoming easier for computers and more difficult for real people which has led many companies, including eBay and Microsoft to work on replacements.

“You can make a captcha absolutely undefeatable by computers, but at some point, you are turning this from a human reading test into an intelligence test and an acuity test,” said Michael Barrett, the chief information security officer at PayPal, a division of eBay. “We are clearly at the point where captchas have hit diminishing returns.”

Captchas, or Completely Automated Public Turing Test to Tell Computers and Humans Apart were developed in 2000 by team from Carnegie Mellon University when commissioned by Yahoo to create an spam protection program. Using a collection of cognitive puzzles unfamiliar to modern computers, captchas was born.

With much research done in an attempt to crack these codes, many people have become more and more successful, even making a business out of cracking captchas. This can work to the benefit of the spammers as well as the companies testing the effectiveness of their puzzles and refining them. This has brought about much controversy especially with time sensitive sites such as Ticketmaster which has created captchas increasingly difficult to read due to the thickness of lines placed over the code.

But new obstacles mean new challenges. Many companies are stepping up to the plate and have yet to disclose their developing programs however, Microsoft has a project in the works called Asirra(for Animal Species Image Recognition for Restricting Access). A series of pictures will be shown and the viewer will be asked to pick out only the dogs or the cats.

“For software, this is wildly hard,” said John Douceur, a Microsoft researcher. “Computers are tripped up by all the photos at different angles, with variable lighting conditions and backgrounds and the animals in different positions.”

There is an effort to keep the captcha in business. Luis von Ahn, professor at Carnegie Mellon and a member of the team that created captchas.His reCaptcha project (recaptcha.net) seeks to block spam while handling the challenge of digitally scanning old books and making them available in Web search engines.

“I heard that 60 million captchas are solved every day around the world, which first made me quite happy for myself but then quite sad,” he said. “It takes about 10 seconds to solve a captcha, so that means humanity is wasting thousands of hours solving them. I wanted to do something good for humanity in that time.”



Reader Comments.

Brilliant! Thank you for an excellent article. Blue Security, as you know, has essentially, walked away from the anti-spam effort they organized after an industry strength Denial of Service attack using bots that have been surreptitiously inserted on thousands of personal computers world-wide through false Trojan offers such as “FREE” ringtones and screensavers. Remember if it’s free you probably can’t afford it! lol. ;)

Posted by Goose | 12:15 pm on June 12, 2007.

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