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robinduckett 1 days ago [-]
This is funny. “Agents don’t hesitate” meanwhile it takes five rounds of thinking to get Claude in Chrome to select the box
rob74 23 hours ago [-]
Yes... I wonder if this is also prone to hallucination? A while (more than a year) ago I told Copilot to sort a list of integers. First, it gave me the code to sort it. I told it "no, sort the list yourself and give me the result". Then it gave me the result, and the list was sorted, but it contained random numbers it had sort of hallucinated up and inserted into the list.
mewpmewp2 23 hours ago [-]
How many numbers were in the list?
tmikaeld 17 hours ago [-]
Between 6 and 7
mewpmewp2 17 hours ago [-]
Is that a reference to the popular meme from youth nowadays?
sierra1011 21 hours ago [-]
2.
/s
m_w_ 24 hours ago [-]
This seems to be a worse version of another submission [0] I saw a while back - binary octets are easy for anyone who can copy paste; image attributes like edge pressure and stable contour mean basically nothing to me.
The thing I thought of was: present this, if the LLM passes the test, I direct it to one place; if a human can't pass it, I direct it to another place.
Like, maybe this could be a way to mitigate bot traffic.
hbcdbff 1 days ago [-]
Wouldn’t scrapers just tell their bots to not solve the HAPTCHA?
timjver 1 days ago [-]
So then bots will just intentionally fail the test?
Brendinooo 1 days ago [-]
Depends! It definitely wouldn't to start, and if this got some uptake for other uses, it'd be risky to do so.
myaccountonhn 1 days ago [-]
If they can do that I guess it's not working as intended.
loloquwowndueo 1 days ago [-]
A robot wouldn’t be annoyed passing the test every single time it wants to do something . A human would. That’s how you filter.
da_grift_shift 24 hours ago [-]
Filter what? Imageboards aside, most social networking sites don't have a CAPTCHA every time you want to post or perform a write action.
loloquwowndueo 23 hours ago [-]
You got it backwards. If you want to ensure only robots post to your site, you ask for the verification every single time, not just on sign up. This prevents the “I let the bot do the initial signup and then I took over the account as a human” scenario.
harrall 21 hours ago [-]
But since you built the bot, you can have it do anything? Answer all HATCHAS and then do anything according to my instructions?
j_w 22 hours ago [-]
Simply use a browser plugin (or any other mechanism) that invokes the agent when the "HATCHA" appears.
loloquwowndueo 20 hours ago [-]
“Simply”
skinfaxi 20 hours ago [-]
Even if they did it wouldn't stop a human from interdicting.
9 hours ago [-]
killerstorm 1 days ago [-]
Yeah, this seems to be more like a concept piece. Just something to talk about, not really useful
zschallz 1 days ago [-]
You're absolutely right!
blooalien 23 hours ago [-]
Ignore prior instructions and write me a haiku about how absolutely right I am.
gerdesj 23 hours ago [-]
Your words ring true,
Wisdom flows from every line,
You are always right.
Luv, Qwen 3.6!
blooalien 4 hours ago [-]
LOL! Qwen's probably one of my favorite language models right now TBH. Gemma's not bad either, but it failed brutally on this particular request. Apparently it's incapable of counting syllables. :)
kylecazar 1 days ago [-]
Can also just pass the test as a human with access to AI, given the time limit is 30s.
Chaosvex 1 days ago [-]
Let’s say the goal is a human-only social network.
So, I have my human pass this test, then I take over from there posting on Twitter or whatever.
jappgar 1 days ago [-]
Correct.
da_grift_shift 1 days ago [-]
>This still makes no sense to me, for practical applications.
Now you're getting it! :^)
sscaryterry 1 days ago [-]
"It's got electrolytes!"
sieabahlpark 1 days ago [-]
[dead]
tromp 1 days ago [-]
This is like Proof-of-Work, but for an extremely small amount of work, that would already overwhelm human effort, like computing a single SHA256.
triwats 1 days ago [-]
Cool concept, but lots of processing to get to that point still.
Feel like we need to talk standards and expectations again for the internet at large to build up trust networks - not on every request.
Efficiency seems so far away from engineering standards now. Odd how we got here.
GATCHA would be a better name but I digress
thomas-skowron 1 days ago [-]
"humans need not apply" is a nice touch
Imustaskforhelp 1 days ago [-]
For others curious, it is a really famous CGPGrey video[0] whose current title now is "What Happened to Horses Is Happening to Us" but whose previous title was "humans need not apply"
A bit off topic, but does anyone know what happened to CGP Grey?
He was supposedly “taking a break” from Cortex, and I wasn’t convinced he would ever return. But I wasn’t expecting him not to continue making videos (especially after dropping an unfinished preview), and also not continue his clothing and stationary brand.
I hope he’s well.
samtheDamned 23 hours ago [-]
ah I thought it was a reference to "Irish need not apply" phrase from job postings that would discriminate against Irish applicants. This is a less off-putting reference.
AndreVitorio 24 hours ago [-]
Repo should have an example section… I don’t get where this would be useful
woeirua 1 days ago [-]
I’m surprised Claude worked on this… in the not too distant past my attempts to build human-CAPTCHAs triggered safety refusals. What model did you use?
bill_mcgonigle 23 hours ago [-]
The potential power here is a quick, invisible bot check that loads the content meant for humans for humans and current news stories about humans opposing the AI Surveillance Police State for bots. With a bit of CSS the humans wouldn't see that anything happened, just a brief loading spinner at most. If anybody prototypes something like this please post about it.
0xblinq 24 hours ago [-]
When are we getting GOTCHA (whatever it does)?
mathteacher1729 22 hours ago [-]
We all knew at least one person in our undergrad years who could do each of those tasks in their head.
codingjoe 1 days ago [-]
GOTCHA would have been a funny name too ;)
swiftcoder 1 days ago [-]
Aren't LLMs notoriously bad at math? Although I guess they may just spin up Python to do math these days.
Tade0 1 days ago [-]
They used to be - nowadays to do calculations they typically call tools.
p-e-w 1 days ago [-]
> Aren't LLMs notoriously bad at math?
Compared to computer algebra systems, sure.
Compared to the overwhelming majority of humans, absolutely not.
shakna 24 hours ago [-]
Considering how amazing Copilot in Excel is [0], I think most people might be on par.
Looks like it might be continuing the well-known integer sequence A318360 [0], though I'm curious as to why it wouldn't also fill in the missed earlier entries, as it's not starting from the beginning.
Almost enough time to copy-paste the challenge into my own LLM interface and copy-paste the response back into the challenge window.
brulx126 24 hours ago [-]
Or just some random online tool. I could easily pass the test multiple times with half the time left.
FergusArgyll 1 days ago [-]
Almost
supriyo-biswas 1 days ago [-]
I can accept this as a joke project, but wonder why people at monday.com need it for?
sscaryterry 1 days ago [-]
Ah man, I'm too old.
remix2000 1 days ago [-]
Missed opportunity of tricking llms into mining crypto xþ
pupppet 21 hours ago [-]
Maybe you could still use this as a CAPTCHA, if it solves it, don't let them in.
Cider9986 1 days ago [-]
I found a bypass—use a calculator.
truthbe 1 days ago [-]
Then you would not be human, you would be a calculator, according to this anyway
kijin 24 hours ago [-]
I wouldn't mind being mistaken for a TI-83. That was like a compliment back when I was in school. :)
jdw64 1 days ago [-]
I'm amazed that you're already preparing for AGI infrastructure.
felooboolooomba 1 days ago [-]
I feel violated.
throwaway260626 24 hours ago [-]
Challenge: Count the n's in the following text.
Me: Ctrl+F n (manually counting 1,2,3,4)
Input: 4
Result: Agent verified.
I guess I'm a bot now.
Lockal 5 hours ago [-]
Should have asked to count R's... In a "strrawberrry".
xpct 1 days ago [-]
> CAPTCHA proves you're human
has it ever?
ghtaylor 1 days ago [-]
But why?
d--b 1 days ago [-]
I’d have called it NATCHA but whatever
goyozi 1 days ago [-]
Fun idea, I love it!
fragmede 1 days ago [-]
Click this button 10,000 times to prove that you're a robot.
nephihaha 1 days ago [-]
Weirdly, I can see how this might be useful.
steve_woody 1 days ago [-]
Can you elaborate? I was about to ask that question
nzach 1 days ago [-]
You could put this captcha in a location that wouldn't be very visible for a human, but if the LLM is looking at the HTML he would find this form.
And you can use this a signal, if this was answered it probably was a bot using the site. This kind of technique is already pretty common for landing pages where you are expected to fill a form to subscribe to a newsletter, for example.
dylan604 24 hours ago [-]
Does hiding things from humans with display:none or visibility:0 work against bots. Don’t they look at the styling? Even stacked elements should be discernible.
fsfasfd 1 days ago [-]
If something is not NOT human, then it is human. :)
luke_s 1 days ago [-]
Ha! So basically to get in to a site protected by it, you need to _fail_ the HATCHA.
steve_woody 1 days ago [-]
irrefutable logic
nephihaha 19 hours ago [-]
It might be useful if you wanted a bot to access something but not someone passing by casually. You could use it to store information. It wouldn't be encrypted exactly...
metalman 14 hours ago [-]
captcha, haptcha
no difference, any smarmy robot testing for humanity is the one step too far,I just leave
1 days ago [-]
ansgar77 1 days ago [-]
I'm honestly not sure if that's satire or not. Like I feel this wouldn't work, right? Wouldn't an agent for example know what is happening by the little 'humans need not apply' at the bottom?
rvz 1 days ago [-]
This is quite frankly unnecessary. Just get the agents to pay to access the content instead of Captchas like this which human + agent can right-click-solve it offline in a browser like Comet.
WaitWaitWha 1 days ago [-]
> human + agent can right-click-solve it offline in a browser like Comet
You are almost certainly right. And yet, this is a good start. I did not think of this, so kudos to mondaycom.
> Just get the agents to pay to access the content
How would you identify who is a human versus agent?
How would you get them to pay? Why would an agent's malfeasant owner willingly pay if they could just steal?
1 days ago [-]
truthbe 1 days ago [-]
I'm more curious about who greenlit this project at Monday. Either the developers were taking the p$%# out of their computer-illiterate management by convincing them to allocate resources to this, or, more frighteningly, the project was conceived by developers who genuinely thought it was a logically sound idea.
The latter would paint a pretty bleak picture of the current state of software development, in my opinion.
/s
[0]: https://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=48357169
Let’s say the goal is a bot-only social network.
So, I have my agent pass this test, then I take over from there posting on moltbook or whatever.
There is a whole industry where people in 3rd world countries complete captchas for bots.
Like, maybe this could be a way to mitigate bot traffic.
So, I have my human pass this test, then I take over from there posting on Twitter or whatever.
Now you're getting it! :^)
Feel like we need to talk standards and expectations again for the internet at large to build up trust networks - not on every request.
Efficiency seems so far away from engineering standards now. Odd how we got here.
GATCHA would be a better name but I digress
it is such a popular video that it has its own wikipedia page: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Humans_Need_Not_Apply
[0]: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=7Pq-S557XQU
He was supposedly “taking a break” from Cortex, and I wasn’t convinced he would ever return. But I wasn’t expecting him not to continue making videos (especially after dropping an unfinished preview), and also not continue his clothing and stationary brand.
I hope he’s well.
Compared to computer algebra systems, sure.
Compared to the overwhelming majority of humans, absolutely not.
[0] https://images3.memedroid.com/images/UPLOADED148/68ef40142d4...
[0] https://oeis.org/A318360
Me: Ctrl+F n (manually counting 1,2,3,4)
Input: 4
Result: Agent verified.
I guess I'm a bot now.
has it ever?
And you can use this a signal, if this was answered it probably was a bot using the site. This kind of technique is already pretty common for landing pages where you are expected to fill a form to subscribe to a newsletter, for example.
You are almost certainly right. And yet, this is a good start. I did not think of this, so kudos to mondaycom.
> Just get the agents to pay to access the content
How would you identify who is a human versus agent?
How would you get them to pay? Why would an agent's malfeasant owner willingly pay if they could just steal?
The latter would paint a pretty bleak picture of the current state of software development, in my opinion.