Carnegie Mellon CAPTCHA Digitization Project Now Underway
tomandlu writes "The BBC is reporting that Carnegie Mellon University has found a novel use for CAPTCHAs — deciphering old texts. We've discussed this project before, but it was prior to it getting off the ground. Users Entering text acts as a sort of distributed computing project. Basically, the CAPTCHA is made up of two words — one of which is known to Carnegie, and one of which isn't. If the user correctly deciphers the known word, then the unknown word is assumed to be correct. Well, almost. Two different users must give the same answer to the same unknown CAPTCHA before it is taken off the list. 'Using the reCAPTCHA system von Ahn's team is digitizing documents and manuscripts as fast as the Internet Archive can supply them, and the good news for book lovers (and bad news for spammers) is that the supply of reCAPTCHAs is not likely to dry up any time soon.'"
I agree... I don't understand why people find so many silly faults with this.
1. Its not twice as annoying. Compared to how faded and scrambled many "one-word" captchas are, this is significantly less annoying.
2. People seem to be acting like someone will fill out one word correctly and then intentionally scramble the other to screw up the project. Not many people are crazy enough to even want to do that. But even if they were, how do they know which word is the known, and which is the unknown?
3. Endless Supply - Each word that is correctly translated is another word that is "known" and therefore can be safely used as a known in a new captcha.
4. Verification - Thanks to #3, they could also potentially maintain the verification % rate for various words to later determine the accuracy or inaccuracy of past translations (assuming that they ever find that to be a problem).
Yeah, we all know that captchas are not perfect, but this project is a better idea than most. And because it is centralized, they can update the image generation scheme centrally if it is broken.
In practice, these seem to get broken less often than people think.
Throw the bums out!