Adrian,

         I am not, repeat not, dismissing the concerns expressed here nor the 
entirely legitimate frustration and anger.  What I am trying to do is to make 
people aware of the intent and purpose of Captchas, how they came about, and 
the fact that they were a resounding success at achieving what they had as 
their intention to achieve.  That does not remove the fact that they are a 
barrier and substitutes need to be found.

         There also seems to be a lack of awareness on the part of many who 
hate Captchas that replacements have to be developed, and that takes time.  
Even if the very first person who complained against Captchas was heard, loud 
and clear, the reason that they are used is legitimate, and the damage that 
resulted before they were invented was significant enough that a "cost-benefit" 
analysis comes out in favor of keeping them, even as they pose a barrier until 
their replacement can be phased in.   No sane company is going to re-open 
itself to the kind of bot attacks that these worked so brilliantly to thwart.  
There are actually considerations other than accessibility that have equal or 
greater weight at times.  I am more than willing to be pilloried for saying 
that.  Even as someone who works with and advocates for individuals with visual 
impairments, this was/is one of those times.   This, too, shall pass, and is 
passing.  But no company should be expected to go back to throwing open the 
gates; that's just not realistic, and that's the sad truth even if absolutely 
no workaround exists.

Brian

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