TẠO THU NHẬP CHO CUỘC SỐNG | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
|
LỊCH SỬ CÔNG VIỆC
The term "CAPTCHA" (based upon the word capture) was coined in 2000 by Luis von Ahn, Manuel Blum, Nicholas J. Hopper, and John Langford (all of Carnegie Mellon University). It is a contrived acronym for "Completely Automated Public Turing test to tell Computers and Humans Apart." Carnegie Mellon University attempted to trademark the term, but the trademark application was abandoned on 21 April 2008. Characteristics A CAPTCHA is a means of automatically generating challenges which intends to: Provide a problem easy enough for all humans to solve. Prevent standard automated software from filling out a form, unless it is specially designed to circumvent specific CAPTCHA systems. A check box in a form that reads "check this box please" is the simplest (and perhaps least effective) form of a CAPTCHA. CAPTCHAs do not have to rely on difficult problems in artificial intelligence, although they can. In the short term, this has the benefit of distinguishing humans from computers. In the long term, it creates an incentive to advance the state of AI. Applications CAPTCHAs are used to stop automated posting to blogs, forums and wikis, whether as a result of commercial promotion, or harassment and vandalism. CAPTCHAs also serve an important function in rate limiting. Automated usage of a service might be desirable until such usage is done to excess and to the detriment of human users. In such cases, administrators can use CAPTCHA to enforce automated usage policies based on given thresholds. The article rating systems used by many news web sites are another example of an online facility vulnerable to manipulation by automated software. Image-recognition CAPTCHA Image recognition CAPTCHAs face many potential problems which have not been fully studied. It is difficult for a small site to acquire a large dictionary of images which an attacker does not have access to and without a means of automatically acquiring new labelled images, an image based challenge does not usually meet the definition of a CAPTCHA. KittenAuth, by default, only had 42 images in its database. Microsoft's "Asirra," which it is providing as a free web service, attempts to address this by means of Microsoft Research's partnership with Petfinder.com, which has provided it with more than three million images of cats and dogs, classified by people at thousands of US animal shelters.Researchers claim to have written a program that can break the Microsoft Asirra CAPTCHA.The IMAGINATION CAPTCHA, however, uses a sequence of randomized distortions on the original images to create the CAPTCHA images. Their original images can be made public without risking image-retrieval or image-annotation based attacks. |
||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
| LÀM VIỆC TRỰC TUYẾN 2010 Free site builder - uCoz | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||