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captchas

CAPTCHAs are tests designed to distinguish humans from computers, commonly used on websites to prevent automated abuse by requiring a user to complete a task that is easy for humans but difficult for machines.

The term CAPTCHA stands for Completely Automated Public Turing test to tell Computers and Humans Apart. It

They work by presenting challenges such as distorted text, image selection, or audio playback. Solutions may

Types include text-based CAPTCHAs, image-based CAPTCHAs, audio CAPTCHAs, puzzle and click-based challenges, and invisible risk scoring

Security and limitations: Advances in machine learning have reduced the effectiveness of older CAPTCHAs. Attackers may

Alternatives and current state: Many sites use risk-based approaches, rate limiting, or device fingerprinting. Some services

was
introduced
in
the
early
2000s
by
researchers
including
Luis
von
Ahn
at
Carnegie
Mellon
University,
with
later
popularization
and
expansion
through
Google's
reCAPTCHA,
acquired
in
2009.
rely
on
human
input
or
on
automated
risk
analysis
that
scores
the
likelihood
the
interaction
is
human.
Some
systems
operate
invisibly,
requiring
no
active
user
input
unless
risk
is
detected.
systems
like
reCAPTCHA
v3.
outsource
solving
tasks.
CAPTCHAs
can
hinder
accessibility
for
users
with
visual
or
cognitive
impairments
and
non-native
speakers,
leading
to
ethical
considerations.
Developers
may
implement
accessibility
alternatives,
such
as
audio
tests,
adjustable
difficulty,
or
non-challenge-based
approaches.
offer
alternative
proofs
of
humanity
like
behavior
analysis.
The
field
continues
to
balance
usability
and
security
as
automated
solving
improves.