M. Tariq Banday; N. A. Shah
Abstract
The massive and automated access to Web resources through robots has made it essential for Web service providers to make some conclusion about whether the "user" is a human or a robot. A Human Interaction Proof (HIP) like Completely Automated Public Turing test to tell Computers and Humans Apart (CAPTCHA) ...
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The massive and automated access to Web resources through robots has made it essential for Web service providers to make some conclusion about whether the "user" is a human or a robot. A Human Interaction Proof (HIP) like Completely Automated Public Turing test to tell Computers and Humans Apart (CAPTCHA) offers a way to make such a distinction. CAPTCHA is a reverse Turing test used by Web service providers to secure human interaction assumed services from Web bots. Several Web services that include and are not limited to free e-mail accounts, online polls, chat rooms, search engines, blogs, password systems, etc. use CAPTCHA as a defensive mechanism against automated Web bots. In this paper, we present a new clickable image-based CAPTCHA technique. The technique presents user with a CAPTCHA image composed of several sub-images. Properties of the proposed technique offer all of the benefits of image-based CAPTCHAs; grant improved security than that of usual OCR-based techniques, consume less Web page area than most of image-based techniques and at the same time improve the user-friendliness of the Web page.