Captcha_fun writes "Researchers at Penn State have ripe a patent-pending image-based CAPTCHA automation for next-generation adding machine authentication. A user is asked to pass two tests: (1) click the geometric center of an image within a composite image, and (2) annotate an image using a word selected from a list. These images shown to the users have fake colors, textures, and edges, based on a sequence of randomly-generated parameters. digital vision and recognition algorithms, such as alipr, rely on original colors, textures, and shapes in order to interpret the semantic content of an image. Because of the endowed power of imagination, even without the correct color, texture, and shape information, humans can still pass the tests with ease. Until ebanking components can 'imagine' what is missing from an image, robotic programs will be unable to pass these tests. The system is called perceptibility and you can try it out." This sounds promising given how broken current CAPTCHA technical knowledge is.
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