SNEAKY SPAMMERS have managed to crack Gmail's protective CAPTCHA, allowing bots to automatically sign up for new accounts, meaning users face even more spam attacks.
Websense Security Labs reckons that cracking the CAPTCHA (Completely Automated Public Turing test to tell Computers and Humans Apart ) was no easy feat and that it required a minimum of two bots, unlike the single bot that was required to recently crack the Windows Live Mail CAPTCHA.
Websense also reckons that the same group of hackers was behind both security breaches. The double bot breach works by having the two bots work together, checking the other's work and ensuring that if one bot times out, the other can continue cracking the code.
The system only seems to have worked once every five
CAPTCHAs, in which users are made to decipher a series of eye squintingly
unfathomable letters and numbers embedded inside an image, are supposedly even
more befuddling to computers than to humans themselves. But, hackers seem to be
rapidly catching up with CAPTCHA code.
Lots of effort is now being put into making stronger, harder to hack CAPTCHAs
including audio-based ones (requiring the user to type the word heard back into
a text box), and complex image ones which make the user choose a set of similar
images (which are nearly always kittens or puppies) before being allowed to go
any further. These more muscular CAPTCHAs discriminate against hearing and sight
impaired people, but are deemed
necessary to prevent the codes from repeatedly being hacked. µ
L'Inq
Websense
Websense, the number one internet sensorship company in the industry shouldn't get any positive coverage what so ever on a beautiful free speech website like this in my honest opinion. With regards to security, Websense may be the most unreliable company out there - security for what I ask? No intelligent IT manager would deploy Websense products in their organization, only facists and religious fanatics does such a nasty thing.
As is the way of the internet, future captchas will probably ask you to input an appropriately funny caption under a picture of a cute kitten. If your phrase is deemed not funny enough, or actually spelt using proper english, you will be flagged as a computer bot. This shall be known as "lolcatcha"*.

* copyright pending, please do not steal!
My company uses Websense to block unauthorized internet usage. The blockage is consistenly unreliable as I am easily able to browse the internet at my leisure throughout the day, with very few inconveniences of actually being blocked. What I find amusing, however, is the fact that an employee was actually given recognition and a financial award for suggesting the use of Websense.