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How do "I'M NOT robot" boxes work?


Internet users often see a message inside a box when logging in or surfing a site, intended to prove themselves human rather than robotic.

That is, the I'M NOT robot has to be clicked in a box.

By the way, this one click with the mouse is a very simple process, but the mechanism behind it is very interesting and startling.

Explaining I'M NOT Robot Boxes, Victor Conginotti, CEO of Proven Data, a cybersecurity company, said that it identifies user patterns and trends to ensure that the person logging into the account is a robot or No boot.

These boxes detect the direction of the mouse, which only a computer user can do. People are accustomed to moving the mouse cursor around, but bots often create ideal geometric shapes and human movements,

he said. It is not possible for them to copy.

Fabian Wasser, CRO of MCSoft, another cybersecurity company, said the boxes also monitor user activity online.

According to him, you may or may not have clicked on the inbox recently, but with very little data it is possible to identify that only one person is clicking on the box.

Nowadays inboxes often come with picture puzzles.

They ask the user to click on traffic lights, bridges or vehicles, there are 2 reasons behind this.

According to cybersecurity expert Jamie Campbell, the first reason is that it is difficult for bots to identify blurred images, while the second reason is linked to Google.

Google uses real-time images to enhance Google Maps and other products.

According to James Goipel, a professor at Drexel University, these boxes also train AI engines, meaning that when you prove yourself human, it also trains technology to understand the difference between bots and people.

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