Sharing AFB blog article on key issue we face during internet access.  Now
even IRCTC log in and National stock exchange site where we create stock
portfolios are added with CAPTCHAs and made things difficult.

Source: http://www.afb.org/blog/afb-blog/can-captchas-be-made-accessible/12

Can CAPTCHAs Be Made Accessible?
Lots of websites have a real and urgent need to keep bots and spammers off
their sites. One partial solution is the CAPTCHA.

What Is a CAPTCHA, and Can It Be Accessible?

Really, a CAPTCHA is any technique that can be used to tell a computer
(bot) from a human. But the most common technique is to put a fuzzy bunch
of characters on the page and ask the user to type them into an edit field.
A human, theoretically, can decipher the fuzzy characters, but a bot
cannot. This has some obvious flaws in it, even if you've never seen these
things (or didn't know what they were, more likely).

First, if you are a human who can't see very well, or can't type very well,
can you do this? The CAPTCHA even keeps away people who don't think they
have a visual impairment, just have normal trouble with tiny, fuzzy,
low-contrast text. If you have to say "Wait, let me go get my glasses," you
know someone who really has low vision is going to be stuck.

What about assistive technology? Can the CAPTCHAs be read by a screen
reader? No. How about putting a civilized alt tag on the image of text? No.
Remember, the sites who use them are trying to keep away bots. So, anything
machine-readable would be easily defeated by the bots.

Some sites have put up an audible CAPTCHA. The idea is to hit a button or
link, listen to some audio, and type what you hear into the box. The audio
is made very hard to understand, a and there are usually several voices
saying numbers and letters, so it is hard for a human to know what to type
and what to ignore. This is intended to defeat the bots, of course, but it
defeats humans, too. Users who don't have good hearing, don't have audio on
their computers, or lack typing skill, are cut out, along with those in
noisy environments.

So, is this really a bleak situation?

No, we have a solution. If you comment on this blog post, you'll see an
accessible CAPTCHA in action.

How Does an Accessible CAPTCHA Work?

Here's how ours works—evil bots, go away, don't read this!

We have a teeny list of questions and answers. The questions have to be
really easy, so that a user who has a reasonable ability to use this site
would be able to answer the question. The answers have to be easy, and no
ambiguous spelling options are allowed. For example, we can never have
"good bye" as the answer, because there are 211 ways to spell it. (I made
that number up.)

So, we might have:

Please type "hello" here.

Or:

Please put the word horse in the box.

We have to vary the structure of the sentence, so that a determined bot
programmer cannot simply say to pull the word out of the quotes and put it
into the box. And, we have to have enough of them that the bot can't put
"horse" into the box and be correct every fifth time.

Advantages of This System Over the Image-of-Fuzzy-Text Approach

It can be made to be any color or any size by the user. So, someone with
low vision can make it readable along with the rest of the site, no special
technique or knowledge required.

The screen reader user hears the clue just like the rest of the site's
text, and can read the clue word-by-word or character-by-character if
necessary to see exactly what is wanted.

Users of braille displays sees the accessible CAPTCHA on the braille
display just as they do any other text, making this technique work just as
well for deaf-blind users as for any user.

In other words, the amount of knowledge, skill, visual acuity, and computer
access for the CAPTCHA is the same as for the rest of the site.

Is This a Perfect Solution?

It is still an obstacle to some human users, in particular those who use
screen readers and have low literacy skills. Some of our users don't know
how to spell "senior" and they don't know how to get their screen readers
to tell them the details. People for whom English is not their native
language have also had trouble with our CAPTCHAs—we avoid using color
names, as users sometimes interpret "Type the word 'blue'" as "Type the
word that is blue," and are frustrated (and angry, as you might imagine).
And, we have to continually update our list of clues and answers, so the
bots don't catch on. We have to test new pairs with users, so we can be
sure we haven't inadvertently introduced complexity.

End of article.


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