What's Up CAPTCHA? A CAPTCHA Based on Image Orientation
Rich Gossweiler, Maryam Kamvar, Shumeet Baluja
We present a new CAPTCHA which is based on identifying an image's upright
orientation. This task requires analysis of the often complex contents of
an image, a task which humans usually perform well and machines generally
do not. Given a large repository of images, such as those from a web search
result, we use a suite of automated orientation detectors to prune those
images that can be automatically set upright easily. We then apply a social
feedback mechanism to verify that the remaining images have a
human-recognizable upright orientation. The main advantages of our CAPTCHA
technique over the traditional text recognition techniques are that it is
language-independent, does not require text-entry (e.g. for a mobile
device), and employs another domain for CAPTCHA generation beyond character
obfuscation. This CAPTCHA lends itself to rapid implementation and has an
almost limitless supply of images. We conducted extensive experiments to
measure the viability of this technique.
paper:
Rich Gossweiler, Maryam Kamvar, Shumeet Baluja, proceedings of the 18th
international conference on World wide web, pp. 841-850, ACM, 2009.