Friday, October 28, 2011
I dont blog here anymore. Visit my new site at Agiliq.com. We do Android Application Development and Iphone Application Development
Thursday, January 18, 2007
Captcha generally (but not always)solve the problem of comment and other spam. But this comes at a price. Users with low visibility and other disablities find solving captcha hard. And blind users cant solve it unless you provide an alternative audio captcha. Why, even Seth hates it!
Negative captcha - where you hide form fields via CSS so user can't see it and hence not fill it, while bots will, is an interesting possibility. But let me itroduce ACAPTCHA - "Almost Completely Automated Public Turing test to tell Computers and Humans Apart" to you. This is waht you do.
1. There are some questions which are very easy for humans to answer but very difficult for bots to understand. Take "What color is a blue towel?" or "Is a green towel red?". Any (well most) humans can answer that qwestion in a snap, but probably not bot can.
2. Create a centralized AND rapidly changing repository of such questions. May be allow users to submit new questions and answers there. May be peer review questions before accepting them, whatever you do get a large and fast changing repositary.
3. Create a plugin/architecture where you get a random question for the repositary (ala Akismet which is a distributed anti spam engine) and ask users to solve it.
There are already some sites which try to do something similar. They ask question where they ask something like "What is 2 + 2". The problem is, it is probably very easy to break this. As soon as this becomes mainstream, you can be sure that the bots will break trough and abuse. To beat completely automated systems, you need to bring in human intelligence.
Negative captcha - where you hide form fields via CSS so user can't see it and hence not fill it, while bots will, is an interesting possibility. But let me itroduce ACAPTCHA - "Almost Completely Automated Public Turing test to tell Computers and Humans Apart" to you. This is waht you do.
1. There are some questions which are very easy for humans to answer but very difficult for bots to understand. Take "What color is a blue towel?" or "Is a green towel red?". Any (well most) humans can answer that qwestion in a snap, but probably not bot can.
2. Create a centralized AND rapidly changing repository of such questions. May be allow users to submit new questions and answers there. May be peer review questions before accepting them, whatever you do get a large and fast changing repositary.
3. Create a plugin/architecture where you get a random question for the repositary (ala Akismet which is a distributed anti spam engine) and ask users to solve it.
There are already some sites which try to do something similar. They ask question where they ask something like "What is 2 + 2". The problem is, it is probably very easy to break this. As soon as this becomes mainstream, you can be sure that the bots will break trough and abuse. To beat completely automated systems, you need to bring in human intelligence.
Labels: Captcha, Comment Spam
Tuesday, January 31, 2006
This is some pseudo random text on a subdomain of a site out of sandbox. http://www.shabda8.frih.net/phpseo/
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This one is to get listed in a search engine. Bridge Loans & Hard Money
Saturday, January 28, 2006
And yet another http://seo-experiments.blogspot.com/Alice4/
Friday, January 27, 2006
And another pseudo random content http://seo-experiments.tripod.com/alice3/index.html.
This is slightly less random and more cohesive. Both have 25 content and are crossed linked pages with only one inbound link. Lets see what PR they garner.
This is slightly less random and more cohesive. Both have 25 content and are crossed linked pages with only one inbound link. Lets see what PR they garner.
Experiment1
This contains some pseudo random content, some almost garbage text http://seo-experiments.tripod.com/Alice2/. Lets see if google indexes it?