@Oliver/@Kiran :

It is indeed Captcha

We are mocking this.

It works absolutely fine.

-Shabana

On Fri, Nov 25, 2011 at 6:58 PM, Oliver Lloyd <[email protected]>wrote:

> You do realise that the entire purpose of captchas is to prevent people
> like
> you using tools like JMeter to automate against the page that the captcha
> sits on, right? (Google's recaptcha has other uses but putting that aside
> for now). Because it does kind of seem like you are trying to automate
> catpcha responses here, which is never going to work because JMeter is not
> human and cannot read obfuscated text. And no, Kiran, he has not broken the
> captcha by successfully writing the first AI JMeter script - he seems to be
> giving it a go though.
>
> Now, if you just want to load the captcha and don't care about submitting
> the correct response then ignore what I just wrote but, er, why? Do you
> work
> for Google? You should only be testing your own code and not spamming
> Google's recaptcha service.
>
> Look, just disable the captcha during your testing, it will save you rather
> a lot of time. You can either do that or another alternative might be to
> load the image but not require that the submitted text be validated - not
> sure if this is possible with this service but it's worthwhile if it is
> because I have seen bottlenecks on the captcha load request before where
> our
> captcha framework code had a bug in it so it is a potential area where
> issue
> can occur.
>
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