Great news! Humans are now slower and perform worse at solving Captchas than machine-learning bots!

Article here:
https://arxiv.org/abs/2307.12108
An Empirical Study & Evaluation of Modern CAPTCHAs

For nearly two decades, CAPTCHAs have been widely used as a means of protection against bots. Throughout the years, as their use grew, techniques to defeat or bypass CAPTCHAs have continued to improve. Meanwhile, CAPTCHAs have also evolved in terms of sophistication and diversity, becoming increasingly difficult to solve for both bots (machines) and humans. Given this long-standing and still-ongoing arms race, it is critical to investigate how long it takes legitimate users to solve modern CAPTCHAs, and how they are perceived by those users. In this work, we explore CAPTCHAs in the wild by evaluating users' solving performance and perceptions of unmodified currently-deployed CAPTCHAs. We obtain this data through manual inspection of popular websites and user studies in which 1,400 participants collectively solved 14,000 CAPTCHAs. Results show significant differences between the most popular types of CAPTCHAs: surprisingly, solving time and user perception are not always correlated. We performed a comparative study to investigate the effect of experimental context -- specifically the difference between solving CAPTCHAs directly versus solving them as part of a more natural task, such as account creation. Whilst there were several potential confounding factors, our results show that experimental context could have an impact on this task, and must be taken into account in future CAPTCHA studies. Finally, we investigate CAPTCHA-induced user task abandonment by analyzing participants who start and do not complete the task.

arXiv.org

@yassie_j In fact, a lot of non-#CAPTCHA - based #bot detection systems use the fact that people - even if they were to copy & paste stuff from Password Managers with keyboard shortcuts will be slower than #bots.

The even go so far as to check if the delay is actually stochastic and not some pre-set & consistent delay like 10240ms per form or 1280ms per field...

@kkarhan @yassie_j what about passwords stored in browser?
@jnbhlr @yassie_j never store credentials in browser - use an external password manager!
@kkarhan @yassie_j so with a password manager integrated in the browser? Still slower than a bit though...
@jnbhlr @yassie_j same: Browsers are THE main attack surface, so using another password manager that isn't the browser like https://enpass.io is best practise...
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@kkarhan @yassie_j that looks like what I meant: a separate piece of software that plugs into the browser. I'm using keepass, without any plug-in connection to the browser.