A computer bot can be trained to simulate the online presence of a human. It can register itself on sites, emulate mouse clicks, ood social networks with annoying links and much more. This resulted in the formation of a new branch of Computer Science termed as human Interactive Proof, which classifies users based on their response to certain questions.
A computer bot can be trained to simulate the online presence of a human. It can register itself on sites, emulate mouse clicks, ood social networks with annoying links and much more. This resulted in the formation of a new branch of Computer Science termed as human Interactive Proof, which classifies users based on their response to certain questions.
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A computer bot can be trained to simulate the online presence of a human. It can register itself on sites, emulate mouse clicks, ood social networks with annoying links and much more. This resulted in the formation of a new branch of Computer Science termed as human Interactive Proof, which classifies users based on their response to certain questions.
Copyright:
Attribution Non-Commercial (BY-NC)
Available Formats
Download as RTF, PDF, TXT or read online from Scribd
A computer BOT can be trained to simulate the online presence of a
human. It can register itself on sites, emulate mouse clicks, ood social networks with annoying links and much more. This resulted in the formation of a new branch of Computer Science termed as Human Inter- active Proof, which classifies users based on their response to certain questions. Captcha or Completely Automatic Public Turing Test to Tell Computer and Human Apart, is one of the prime developments in this field. These techniques use Artificial Intelligence and other real life models to distinguish between a bot and a human. They basically ask one or more questions that a human can answer, but current computational systems cant.