Comment by terminalshort
3 months ago
There is a doom loop mode where it doesn't matter how many you solve or even if you get them correct. My source for this works on this product at Google.
3 months ago
There is a doom loop mode where it doesn't matter how many you solve or even if you get them correct. My source for this works on this product at Google.
That doesn't surprise me. I find it hard to believe it's a pure coincidence that I would get stuck in the loop regularly when I'm on the university wifi but it would never happen anywhere else ever. After a dozen try, I would remote connect to my home pc and it would magically work on the first try every single time.
Someone from your university tried to scrape data from Google.
I know it's still not justified, but it's the easy solution that works for preventing DOS attacks.
>Someone from your university tried to scrape data from Google.
Kinda wild that someone scraping google's data would prevent me from getting into my PAID (>90$/yr) Dropbox account. That experience is a big part of why I pay extra to host my host data on my own server now.
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Tell them I hate them.
Oh, don't worry. That's just v2. V3 uses the Google panopticon to watch your every move and decide if you're human or not that way without ever making you click on images. I'm sure you'll love it!
Firefox and Ubuntu can reliably trigger this mode.
I have a recording of me trying to pass the captcha for straight 5 minutes and giving up. To be fair, this has only happened once.
What is the purpose of such loop? Bots can simply switch to another residential proxy when the captcha success rate gets low. For normal humans, it is literally "computer says no".
It’s not just IP. The score is linked to your google account as well and tracked across google properties