How can they write this and not say “Voight-Kampff” ? #captcha #security

A human rights group is introducing a new take on CAPTCHAs, those little boxes that make you type in a word to prove you are human before you can comment or register for a site. Their version doesn’t just present a scrambled word to be deciphered, but instead forces a person to choose the right word to unscramble based on the proper emotional response to a human rights violation.

Civil Rights Defenders, the Swedish-based group that developed the tool, hopes the Civil Rights Captcha will help sites block spiders and bots, while letting humans in — and hopefully educating the humans at the same time.

One hopes that being required to choose “Terrible” rather than “Fascinated” when asked how you feel about gay people being beaten will keep out the trolls — but that’s probably asking too much.

But perhaps forcing a troll to repeatedly choose an empathetic response will, over time, soothe the ravages of comment sections around the net. Okay, that might also be asking too much, but at the very least spreading information about human rights abuses certainly can’t hurt, even if the jerks of the internet (see, for example, YouTube comments) remain beyond help.

Fend Off Trolls, Bots and Jerks With ‘Empathy’ Test | Threat Level | Wired.com.

Comments

2 responses to “How can they write this and not say “Voight-Kampff” ? #captcha #security”

  1. Dave Walker

    I expect this will be squashed, under objections to discrimination on the basis of culture.

  2. Dave Walker

    Perceived risk of copyright breach, I’ll bet – although I have no idea how litigious the custodians of PKD’s literary estate are. I still think it’s a real shame that the articulated corridors you walk through at airports to get to and from the aircraft doors, rather than walking across open concrete and traversing a mobile staircase, aren’t called “docking tubes”, and surmise it’s for a similar reason.

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