It seems the best alternative might be to have the ability to call you or
contact you in some way for verification for handicapped individuals.
regards,
kevin
This is a mixed question, I have a contact form that I'm
building. I want to add a human verifier to the forms but not a
On Thu, Sep 4, 2008 at 11:41 AM, Essential eBiz Solutions Ltd
[EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
*[image: Click the Essential eBiz Solutions logo to visit our home
page]http://www.essentialebizsolutions.net
*
* Hi All,* *This is a mixed question, I have a contact form
that I'm
reCAPTCHA sounds good. I tried it out and the audio for vision impaired
visitors worked fine.
The service seems to be free and is set up to digitize old books that
cannot be scanned, literally, one word at a time. Pretty amazing!
kevin
Hi,
I've seen this captcha service and, according to
On Thu, Sep 4, 2008 at 11:34 AM, kevin erickson
[EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
reCAPTCHA sounds good. I tried it out and the audio for vision impaired
visitors worked fine.
The service seems to be free and is set up to digitize old books that cannot
be scanned, literally, one word at a time. Pretty
Hi eBiz,
In this article [1] I explain the how-to a bit and offer some additional
solutions. Perhaps you could integrate those code snippets in your order
form.
[1] http://green-beast.com/blog/?p=220
Respectfully,
Mike Cherim
- Original Message -
From: Essential eBiz Solutions
Well I can vouch that reCAPTCHA doesn't work for hearing impaired or
deaf folks. There have been times when I've been unable to decipher
the warped text visually (and I'm not sight impaired) - and audio is
no use at all.
Contact form spam should never be the problem of the user. And there
Mike your still a god in my eyes, even more so now. Many thanks.
-Original Message-
From: [EMAIL PROTECTED] [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] On
Behalf Of Mike at Green-Beast.com
Sent: 04 September 2008 17:12
To: wsg@webstandardsgroup.org
Subject: Re: [WSG] Accesbility Help
Hi eBiz
If you want to avoid captchas, my recommendation would be to add a
question that would foil a robot. Just explain that this field is for
that specifically.
Something like:
fieldset
legendHuman Verification/legend
pThis section is used to thwart evil spam robots. Fill in the correct
, but either way it'll
prevent answers like Blue, BLUE, bLuE, etc. from triggering the Robot! Get
out! error.
Respectfully,
Mike Cherim
- Original Message -
From: Joseph Taylor [EMAIL PROTECTED]
To: wsg@webstandardsgroup.org
Sent: Thursday, September 04, 2008 1:01 PM
Subject: Re: [WSG
Pretty much what I was lucking for, similar to Mike's solution. Work on a
screen reader to unlike captcha.
-Original Message-
From: [EMAIL PROTECTED] [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] On
Behalf Of Joseph Taylor
Sent: 04 September 2008 18:02
To: wsg@webstandardsgroup.org
Subject: Re: [WSG
it'll prevent answers like Blue, BLUE, bLuE, etc. from triggering the
Robot! Get out! error.
Respectfully,
Mike Cherim
- Original Message - From: Joseph Taylor [EMAIL PROTECTED]
To: wsg@webstandardsgroup.org
Sent: Thursday, September 04, 2008 1:01 PM
Subject: Re: [WSG] Accesbility Help
Sent: Thursday, September 04, 2008 1:01 PM
Subject: Re: [WSG] Accesbility Help
If you want to avoid captchas, my recommendation would be to add a
question that would foil a robot. Just explain that this field is for that
specifically.
Something like:
fieldset
legendHuman Verification/legend
Hey,
I saw a funny one once. A site had a really basic math problem. Like 4x2
or something. Type in the answer and you submitted the form. Because
it's HTML it's accessible.
IceKat.
Scott Elcomb wrote:
On Thu, Sep 4, 2008 at 11:34 AM, kevin erickson
[EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
reCAPTCHA
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