By mistake while me trying to prove that I am human I pressed enter before I finished the last character (One of my hands was faster; it's cold here.) and it worked; I waited and tried it again (twice more) to confirm it and it actually works. I am not sure whatever I can miss more than one character, but surely I can one character.
-
1Wondering whatever it's duplicate, because of that downvote.– LyingOnTheSkyCommented Nov 24, 2014 at 16:24
-
6Probably someone who assumed you're trolling...which appearantly you're not....– reneCommented Nov 24, 2014 at 16:28
-
4I'm curious as to why you posted about it here, rather than on data's meta or (more appropriately) the overall SE meta.– Chris HayesCommented Nov 24, 2014 at 23:07
-
2@ChrisHayes I didn't knew there was such thing, until now.– LyingOnTheSkyCommented Nov 25, 2014 at 11:10
-
@ChrisHayes I tried meta.data.stackexchange.com and nothing's there; care to post a valid link?– LyingOnTheSkyCommented Nov 25, 2014 at 20:26
-
1Just kidding, apparently data.SE is bizarre and doesn't have a meta. Ignore me on that one. :) meta.SE might still be a better home.– Chris HayesCommented Nov 26, 2014 at 0:18
Add a comment
|
1 Answer
This is refreshing; usually folks complain about the CAPTCHAs being too hard!
Anyway, you can get some parts wrong because your answers are being used to help recognize text that isn't already known:
reCAPTCHA offers more than just spam protection. Every time our CAPTCHAs are solved, that human effort helps digitize text, annotate images, and build machine learning datasets. This in turn helps preserve books, improve maps, and solve hard AI problems.
Of course, you do have to get at least part of the CAPTCHA right, and there's no guarantee which part that is.
-
10To add: The way that the computer determines whether the answer is correct or not is that inserts an actual captcha in combination with the unknown text. If you get that part correct, your entire answer is considered correct, even though you got the unknown part wrong. The same unknown part is given to many other testers to determine a confidence level. The only problem is that you don't know which is the captcha, and which one's the real text.– gparyaniCommented Nov 25, 2014 at 6:23
-
11@damryfbfnetsi Sometimes it can be pretty obvious, like when one is computer generated, and the other an image of a house number. Commented Nov 25, 2014 at 14:49
-
I'm not sure how it works, but I see a image with letter bg, and I passed the checking by just enter o...– BoluCommented Nov 25, 2014 at 15:03
-
@Scimonster That's why I used italics to indicate the possible sarcasm...some people just don't understand it.– gparyaniCommented Nov 25, 2014 at 15:31
-
Here is the URL for the text quoted above in case anyone wants to do some further reading. google.com/recaptcha/intro– CaltorCommented Nov 25, 2014 at 15:54
-
11@damryfbfnetsi Italics convey emphasis, not necessarily sarcasm. It's not that "some people just don't understand it", it's just that you're bad at communicating it.– lilyCommented Nov 25, 2014 at 17:36
-
1@Scimonster Well, not necessarily. What if the house number if already converted with a high enough confidence, enabling it to be used as the actual captcha? Commented Nov 25, 2014 at 17:43
-
2is this part of the semantic web? is there official markup for sarcasm? . Commented Nov 26, 2014 at 14:55
-