Wow. I want this as a browser plugin. The image recaptchas are extremely time consuming (maybe I click the wrong images, or they're just punishing me for logging out and clearing cookies...), and I don't want to futz with the audio ones.
Yeah, it's really brutal. I find the new recaptchas which I hit almost every time are much more exhausting than the old text-based ones, and probably much easier for a machine to solve to boot.
The worst are the questions like "Click the images with a store front" what the hell is a store front? Especially in today's world.. Is a garage a store front? Is a hot dog stand a store front? Same with like "Click the images with cars" but there's a crossover. Is that a car? Is a station wagon a car?
I've found it's best to just not think about it too much. CAPTCHAs are, after all, designed to "tell Computers and Humans Apart". You're a human, so just pick whatever seems reasonable and move on. If the system doesn't accept your answer, that's _its_ fault, not yours.
I've gotten several times the one asking for "tea", that requires you to select three pictures of coffee[1]. With the store fronts, at least I can read what they say. They are often in Spanish, for one reason.
So humans have to clear higher and higher hurdles to prove themselves human while the computers use the answers from the captchas to get closer to humans' capabilities.
I was meaning to use the idiom "to boot", you cut off a word.
Perhaps my grammar wasn't correct there though.
In any case, check out the blackhat presentation about using Google's image recognition to solve the image based captchas. There are a wide variety of fairly advanced image recognition tools but a surprisingly small number of complex text recognition ones.
It's not you. They simply don't fucking work anymore. I'd pay for this as a browser plugin because clearly Google at some point stopped testing to actually see if recaptcha actually works. It doesn't, though it used to. Sites that use recaptcha are broken and if I do contact them for other reasons, I make sure to let them know that the site is inaccessible to a large part of their audience. Ironically, that includes part of Google itself ...
I get a recaptcha every time I log into hilton to book a hotel room for a trip. That's the only site this happens on; I wonder what I'm doing to trigger it.
Sites get to set the captcha security. There's 3 tiers. The highest one will always bug the user, the lower one will almost never do it (unless it's a specific flagged IP). Default is somewhere in the middle, but I'm guessing that site has it set to the highest.
The person you're replying to has a different issue. The way the one button captcha works is by using your cookies to try to figure out if you're a real human user or a robot. If you clear your cookies, you'll almost always get the captcha.