I'm working on a website in which I have very strict spam filters, but when you trigger them, you can enter a CAPTCHA to continue, this allows for words such as "[Ff][Rr][Ee][Ee]" to be filtered, and still allow people (albeit, ironically) to say "Freedom"
There has to be a better way to stop them than CAPTCHA, right? Something like answering a question such as "If I have three apples and you take two..."
[...]Gpcode used 1024-bit RSA/128-bit RC4 to lock up victims' data, an uncrackable combination that left the world with only one solution: find the virus author to get the master key.[...]
Reminds me of a program that steals your password, then prints it out on your printer. Same type of humor, if that.
Linux for niggers: http://www.gnaa.eu/wiki/products
"The mask of anonymity is not intensely constructive." -- Andrew "weev" Auernheimer
Justin D. May, infamous iPad hacker.
I'm just afraid I'll find a finger in my CPU.
Furries will also be disappointed to read the headline "Study questions usefulness of animal-human embryos".
A 20? My mobile client gets three times that!
Now we have "willyonwwheels".
Read the story before posting.
Rails can only prosper from this (ugh, I hate how I'm phrasing this) 'merger'.
"Shit, won't the government bail me out?"
I'm working on a website in which I have very strict spam filters, but when you trigger them, you can enter a CAPTCHA to continue, this allows for words such as "[Ff][Rr][Ee][Ee]" to be filtered, and still allow people (albeit, ironically) to say "Freedom"
Dude, you should seriously be coming up with more of these ideas!
There has to be a better way to stop them than CAPTCHA, right? Something like answering a question such as "If I have three apples and you take two..."
[...]scam artists who use fake security alerts to frighten consumers into paying for worthless computer security software.[...]
Isn't most computer security software useless anyway? I GOT NORTON YOU CAN'T TOUCH ME!
So, what is this CAPTCHA? "ILUVBILLGATE$" or "MAC$UXX"? Grow up Microsoft, CAPTCHA is soooo 2004.
[...]Gpcode used 1024-bit RSA/128-bit RC4 to lock up victims' data, an uncrackable combination that left the world with only one solution: find the virus author to get the master key.[...]
Reminds me of a program that steals your password, then prints it out on your printer. Same type of humor, if that.