On 06/20/2015 12:31 AM, Andreas Krey wrote:
On Fri, 19 Jun 2015 22:38:26 +, Joe Btfsplk wrote:
...
Using default browser installation settings?
I so rarely have success, that I immediately close tabs for sites
presenting Cloudfare.
Even when the puzzle is clearly legible (rarely), it
On Fri, 2015-06-19 at 22:38 -0500, Joe Btfsplk wrote:
Does anyone have any meaningful success rate with Cloudfare captchas in
Tor Browser?
Using default browser installation settings?
I so rarely have success, that I immediately close tabs for sites
presenting Cloudfare.
Even when the
On Fri, 19 Jun 2015 22:38:26 +, Joe Btfsplk wrote:
...
Using default browser installation settings?
I so rarely have success, that I immediately close tabs for sites
presenting Cloudfare.
Even when the puzzle is clearly legible (rarely), it still doesn't work.
The last weeks I was
On Sat, 20 Jun 2015 06:43:37 -0700, Juan Miguel Navarro Martínez
juanmi.3...@gmail.com wrote:
El 20/06/2015 a las 10:18, Mirimir escribió:
Is Javascript always needed to get the number photo CAPTCHAs?
At least for me, it does 100% of the time:
No JS: Infinite unreadable CAPTCHA.
JS:
TL;DR: If you can, consider not using that services/sites find
alternatives and promote them.
On Sat, Jun 20, 2015 at 03:43:37PM +0200, Juan Miguel Navarro Martínez wrote:
El 20/06/2015 a las 10:18, Mirimir escribió:
Is Javascript always needed to get the number photo CAPTCHAs?
At least for
On 06/20/2015 12:31 AM, Andreas Krey wrote:
The last weeks I was usually getting the number photo captchas,
and they work. Last week there were more of the hard two word
captchas, but even these usually work - sometimes I just reload
the page and then I often get a number captcha.
Thanks. Yes,
Just to clarify (to all that replied) - I have JS enabled. At least,
when trying to get captchas to work.
Then, I'm using Tor Browser's default settings for NoScript.
I just tried a couple of sites w/ Cloudfare.
Today, it worked, but not on the 1st try - even with legible house numbers.
But
grarpamp:
http://shofarnexus.com/Blog-2015-01-13
Under The hole in TOR:
If you see a 456 byte message sent from computer A and a moment later
the same or similar size message arrive at computer B you could draw
an obvious conclusion.
But, Tor cells are a fixed-size of 512 bytes: