CAPTCHA, a visual interface feature, or code, to
stop automated computer
programs, known as bots and spiders, from gaining access to Websites. A CAPTCHA, which
may consist of letters, numbers, or images, is distorted in some manner to
prevent recognition by computers
but not so distorted that a human with normal vision cannot identify the code
and retype it.
CAPTCHA LOGO
In
2000 Yahoo! inc., an American internet services
company, was having trouble keeping computer programs that were pretending to
be teenagers out of its chat rooms, where the programs were collecting personal
information and adding spam. Yahoo! contacted the computer science department at Carnegie Mellon University for help. Manuel Blum, a
computer science professor at Carnegie Mellon, led a group (including Luis von
Ahn, Nicholas Hopper, and John Langford) that came up with the first
CAPTCHA—an acronym for
“completely automated public Turing Test to tell computers and humans
apart.”
As
computer programs became more sophisticated, the early simple techniques of
using overlapping letters and various background colours and patterns were
replaced by using ever more broken or partial typefaces and highly distorted
script characters. Carried to an extreme, many people found they could no
longer read CAPTCHAs, which led to the development of CAPTCHAs based on
identifying some object, such as a type of animal, from a photograph. The
development of CAPTCHAs has spurred research in visual recognition, a field
in Artifical intelligence that
has applications in optical scanning software, remote sensing, and robotics.

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