Authors
Elie Bursztein, Steven Bethard, Celine Fabry, John C Mitchell, Dan Jurafsky
Publication date
2010/5/16
Conference
2010 IEEE symposium on security and privacy
Pages
399-413
Publisher
IEEE
Description
Captchas are designed to be easy for humans but hard for machines. However, most recent research has focused only on making them hard for machines. In this paper, we present what is to the best of our knowledge the first large scale evaluation of captchas from the human perspective, with the goal of assessing how much friction captchas present to the average user. For the purpose of this study we have asked workers from Amazon's Mechanical Turk and an underground captchabreaking service to solve more than 318 000 captchas issued from the 21 most popular captcha schemes (13 images schemes and 8 audio scheme). Analysis of the resulting data reveals that captchas are often difficult for humans, with audio captchas being particularly problematic. We also find some demographic trends indicating, for example, that non-native speakers of English are slower in general and less accurate on English …
Total citations
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Scholar articles
E Bursztein, S Bethard, C Fabry, JC Mitchell, D Jurafsky - 2010 IEEE symposium on security and privacy, 2010