On Thu, Feb  4, 2016 at 10:54 pm, Soronel Haetir <[email protected]> 
wrote:
They solved an
actual problem and sad to say the slice of potential customers unable
to deal with them is small enough that I can well see companies having
better things to focus on. Companies don't _owe_ us anything.

And even if the companies do "owe you something," Captchas, as I already 
pointed out, at length, came into existence to address a pressing and immediate 
problem that was getting worse and worse and worse.  It was far more important 
to stop it, as dead as possible, and quickly, than anything else.

I have no problem with people complaining about Captchas, advocating for 
changes, etc.  That's been done and those issues have been identified and 
registered.  The creation of the reCaptcha is a direct result.

What I do have a problem with is certain people acting like it's OK to hold the 
false belief that Captchas were a targeted attack on accessibility and the 
blind.  They weren't, they just had that as a very nasty side effect.  The 
companies had a choice to make based upon the technology available at the time, 
and if it fixed their major issue, and it did, while screwing over a tiny 
fraction of their customer base, which it did, any sane person knows how the 
math goes with that one and that it's the math, and nothing else, that was the 
primary consideration.  It wasn't about you, and treating it as though it was 
isn't doing anyone any favors.  Knowing the difference between being attacked, 
and being collateral damage, gives one perspective.

My attitude has to do with addressing reality and stepping outside one's own 
bubble, which some seem incapable of doing.

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