n̛̠̫̪̰̜̗̭͇̊͂̋́̒̾̐ͯ̈́̓̑͛̉͒͡ͅͅỉ̷̷̴ͦͦ̇̋̈ͪͣ̽ͥ̽͗̔ͨ̎̚҉̣̝̘̺͚̥̱̜̹̪͎̣̱̳̠̰ͅh̎ͧ͐͐̑̆̃̈́̀̌͛̏͒ͣ̾̓͟҉̡̘̥͖̺͓̫̬͕̕i̷̢͍̫̫̩̮̖̥̫̣̦̯̖̰̼̟͚̎̇̎ͩ͛̉̓̑̾̒ͧ̈́̍ͨͩ̓ͤ́̕͡͞l̵̷̡̯̼͈̯̥͖͈̪̻͚̙̭̘̻̣͙̠͂ͫ̃̈́̚ ̩̙̥ͭ̋̇̌̂͐ͮ͐̓ͮ͢͞t̸̸̢̻̤̣̬̗͚̜͇̼͈͍̥͍͎̟̤͖ͭ̒͆̌͢͠i̶̴̞̣̫̹̥̥͎͉̱̖̦ͧ̊͊̄̊͋ͭ̀͜m̨͚̟͖̻̮̖̞͙̣̠͖̦̉̽̃ͬͯͣ͐͆͌͐̿̃̋̃̇ͫ̚ę̃ͬͧ̄̇͑ͥ̋̓̿̂̐͘͠҉̵͕͓̳̤̻̖̳̞̦̳͎̙̰̱̣̱͇n͈̜̦̣͉͓̗̓̍ͮ̇̎͜͟d̠̝̲̹̠̰̞͎̘̖̮̹͗̃̅̄̀͢͡͡ͅṷ̷̧̮̫̬͔̽͛ͧͥͧ̈́̎̒̋͊m̏̃ͥ̓̌͌̓̃́͒͏҉̺̬̞̪̝̰̯͓̱͈̘̥̞͙̮̦ͅ



posts from @hellscape tagged #CAPTCHA

also:

Also, here's a Pro Tip: When you're filling out a CAPTCHA, the thing most of them are looking for to verify your humanity is not, in fact, the picture matching. Most CAPTCHA networks are well aware that generative AI can beat photo matching CAPTCHAs, these days. Instead, it's watching your cursor. If you have a high sensitivity mouse or trackpad and you're darting your mouse to the photos in pretty straight lines, you're going to keep failing even if you're matching the photos perfectly.

Robot's tend to move cursors from one point to another in a perfect straight line. Therefore, if you get close, the CAPTCHA thinks you're a robot. Therefore, if you're experiencing a CAPTCHA that just won't let you past, even though you're answering everything right, try slowing down your cursor movement. The slower your cursor moves, the more micro-imperfections appear in its movement pattern, making it look more human. Therefore, the CAPTCHA will let you past.