• Home
  • About Us
  • Schedule
  • News
    • Citi Sports
    • Citi Business
  • Citi TV
  • Audio On Demand
  • Events
Citi 97.3 FM - Relevant Radio. Always
No Result
View All Result
Citi 97.3 FM - Relevant Radio. Always
  • Home
  • About Us
  • Schedule
  • News
    • Citi Sports
    • Citi Business
  • Citi TV
  • Audio On Demand
  • Events
Citi 97.3 FM - Relevant Radio. Always

Google develops invisible web security Captcha form

March 11, 2017
Reading Time: 2 mins read
Share on FacebookShare on TwitterShare on Whatsapp

Website security checks that challenge people to prove they are human are likely to “disappear” in favour of a new system developed by Google.

Captcha checks typically ask people to complete a puzzle that a computer would struggle to complete correctly.

They are designed to stop automated bots accessing and using websites.

Google’s new system tracks how a person interacts with a website to prove they are real, so the puzzles are no longer necessary for most people.

Captcha checks are often deployed by concert ticket websites to stop people setting up automated bots to buy all the best tickets. They also appear when somebody is trying to log in to a website with the wrong password, to spot automated attempts.

The puzzles present challenges that people find simple but computers can find more difficult, such as:

1. identifying photographs of dogs in a gallery of animal pictures

2. typing numbers from a photograph of a road sign into a box
3. listening to somebody reading out numbers over music and typing the numbers into a box

4. The puzzles also benefit companies such as Google by helping train artificial intelligence algorithms.

For example, if Google’s AI can not recognise a house number in a photograph taken by a Streetview car, it may add the photo to its Captcha system to get human input.

However, genuine users can find the interruption by puzzles a nuisance.

Google’s reCaptcha system has already simplified the process by asking users to tick a check box on the website they are using. The box monitors how each person has interacted with it, to separate natural human clicks from bots.

For example, an automated script might take just a second to fill in a form on a website, and may not move the mouse at all during the process.

Google’s latest development removes the check box as well, and instead analyses how people have interacted with other elements on a website such as the “submit form” button.

However, in some cases “suspicious” activity will still trigger a puzzle.

–

Source: BBC

Tags: CaptchaGoogleinvisibleSecurity
Previous Post

Use agriculture as bait for economic development – Kofi Annan

Next Post

‘Game of Thrones’ season 7 to be premiered in July

  • About Citi FM
  • Archives
  • Audio on Demand
  • CITI OPPORTUNITY PROJECT ON EDUCATION (COPE)
  • Events
  • Heritage Caravan: Registration Form
  • Home
  • Schedule
Call us: +233 30 222 6013

© 2024 Citi 97.3 FM - Relevant Radio. Always

No Result
View All Result
  • Home
  • About Us
  • Schedule
  • News
    • Citi Sports
    • Citi Business
  • Citi TV
  • Audio On Demand
  • Events

© 2024 Citi 97.3 FM - Relevant Radio. Always