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Google Scholar Users Report Badly Malfunctioning Captcha (google.com)

Google's search engine for academic research materials is blocking many users with a malfunctioning captcha screen, according to complaints on a Google help forum. "I'm a doctoral student and a professor, which means I use this extensively. Now I'm blocked from using it at all, even after answering all of the stupid image questions (3 times)," reads a typical complaint.

Heart44 writes: A lot of researchers when using Google Scholar are being asked to prove they are not a robot. You have to find all the rivers (but not the sea or lakes) or all street numbers (but not other numbers) or all the store fronts from nine poor quality images, sometimes more than once and, surprise, you will fail more than two thirds of the time and then just get an error 400 "Malformed request, that's all we know". You are offered an audio challenge but clicking on that simply loads more pictures... Is that the best they can do distinguishing between man and machine?
One post ended by stating succinctly "I'm not a robot, I'm an academic professional, and this process is wasting nontrivial amounts of my time. How do I stop it?"

3 of 131 comments (clear)

  1. Re:Captchas are for Cows by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0, Insightful

    Moooo.

    Moooo! Mooooo! Moooo! Mooooo! Moooooo Cows Moooo!

  2. Why? by Ark42 · · Score: 5, Insightful

    Why exactly do we feel the need place captchs in front of viewing/reading documents? Google's entire business revolves around a robot reading every webpage on the planet in order to index them. I've seen a lot of websites start using Distil recently because they don't want people scraping the content of their sites. But all this does is lead to tons of annoyances for regular users. (And as an aside, Distil is trivial to get around, and I've been paid to write scripts for a handful of different people to do so, so Distil is certainly a huge waste of money for anybody paying them).
    What happened to an open web where we can all share and read content freely?

  3. Re:It finally happened by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 2, Insightful

    No. The problem is the system asks for certain types of images that simply do not exist. Here is an example of how shit Google's captcha system is. Look at it and beat the living shit out of the next mother fucker that works on this crap at Google. In case you're wondering the salad was the street number. THE FUCKING SALAD!