It's a clever hack, but there's one thing I don't understand. CAPTCHAs are supposed to contain a word known to the computer. You key it in and the computer confirms that you're a human being by comparing your entry to what the computer knows the CAPTCHA to be.
But if CAPTCHAs contain text unknown to the computer -- and any text that stymies OCR software is, by definition unknown to the computer -- then what's to stop you from entering anything in the CAPTCHA box and gaining entry?
Instead of requiring visitors to retype random numbers and letters, they would retype text that otherwise is difficult for the optical character recognition systems to decipher when being used to digitize books and other printed materials. The translated text would then go toward the digitization of the printed material on behalf of the Internet Archive project .Link (via /.)“I think it’s a brilliant idea — using the Internet to correct OCR mistakes,” said Brewster Kahle, director of the Internet Archive, in a statement. “This is an example of why having open collections in the public domain is important. People are working together to build a good, open system.”
Update: Alex sez, "the system works by having two words displayed. One that is computer generated (hence the computer knows what it is) and the other a scan from a book to be solved by the human (you do not know which is which). You enter in both words, if you get the computer generated one correct - the system knows your a human and lets you in. It can then also assume you entered the other non-generated word in correctly and can use it."
See also:
Solving and creating captchas with free porn
PWNTCHA: defeating CAPTCHAs with software
Use kittens to distinguish bots from people

Common sense tells you that promiscuity spreads AIDS, population growth threatens prosperity, and misers make bad neighbors. I wrote this book to assault your common sense.




The brother's McLeod have created another creepy/cool cartoon short that uses the spam filter-breaking text that hideous spammers add to the bottom of their junk mail.
Spike says: "Check out these cute retro weather report animations...one for seemingly every possible weather condition...This goes on for about 7 minutes so be ready for it." 
I just got a sneak peek at issue one of the long-overdue new Tank Girl series, illustrated by Ashley "Zombies Vs Robots" Wood and written by Alan Martin, the co-creator of the original comic. It's been more than a decade since I first read Tank Girl, and I was a little trepidatious about revisiting the beloved, filthy Australian nihilist comic given that it has a completely new look.

BB fave artist Tim Biskup's new gallery exhibition, titled Ether, opens this weekend at the Billy Shire Fine Arts gallery in Culver City, California. Mark went to the preview opening last night and said it was just incredible. Fortunately, the art is viewable on the gallery's Web site. Absolutely phenomenal.
ZUSE doesn't see itself merely as a compact toasting device but more like a print-maker of the traditional kind... With its candid intention of providing happiness to its owner ZUSE can randomly draw from its repertoire of images encoded in its memory chip.
Barbara sez, "Robert Heinlein, Grand Master of Science Fiction, inspiration to many of us, is turning 100 on 7/7/07 and there will be a celebration of his life and work in Kansas City, Mo on that weekend."
The Saints are an Australian rock band, formed in Brisbane in 1974. They are considered to be one of the first and most influential punk groups. By 1975, contemporaneously with the Ramones but on the other side of the world, The Saints were employing the fast tempos, slurred vocals and buzzsaw guitar that characterised early punk rock. With the release of their first single "(I'm) Stranded" in late 1976, they beat on to vinyl a host of more widely-known punk acts like the Sex Pistols, the Buzzcocks, and The Clash. Bob Geldof has been quoted as saying, "Rock music in the Seventies was changed by three bands - the Sex Pistols, the Ramones and The Saints".
Chen Guoping of China's Zhejiang province bought this fantastic tomato at a local market. "It looks so much like a mouse head that I bought it without hesitation," he told the People's Daily. "It looks very funny."
Dr Martens did not commission the work as it runs counter to our current marketing activities based on FREEDM, which is dedicated to nurturing grass roots creativity and supporting emerging talent.

Fark's latest photoshopping challenge: LOLPresidents with cute ungrammatical sayings, just like the kittonz! Warning: many of these are funny. Others are just tasteless and gross. Not for the easily offended.
MSNBC.com has done a deal with cinemas in the US to replace the dumb pre-movie ads with a giant, participatory game. The game is Newsbreaker, a simple break-out style game that rewards you for clearing lines by dropping real-time RSS news headlines, but the gameplay is the cool part: a motion sensor in the theater allows the entire audience to control the paddle by swaying in unison from side to side. Check out the video of the gameplay at a Spiderman 3 opening weekend screening in LA (given what a steaming CGI turd Spidey 3 is, this was probably the best part of the movie, apart from being harassed by night-scoped teenagers looking for camcorder pirates). These people are having insane fun.
Flavoring