I've been testing Google's new version of reCaptcha on a website outside of SellerDeck for some time now, and it might be a good future feature fof form completion on SellerDeck sites.
noCaptcha (or the new reCaptcha) presents the user with a checkbox to tick, rather than requesting they identify some distorted text/number pattern. It looks at how the user moves their mouse and interacts with the checkbox and what it does afterwards, so something that goes in a direct line to the checkbox would be identified as a bot. I'm not sure, but I think it also takes a look at past browsing history to help determine whether the user is a human or not. Exactly how it does it is Google's secret at the moment, but it definitely seems to be a better option than the older version of reCaptcha.
In all cases, it uses the old style of reCaptcha system with the distorted letters/numbers or the new version where you identify images which match a keyphrase ("select all the pictures of cake").
This might be more secure, since reCaptcha has become quite ineffective at stopping bots from using forms, and it might be a nice little detail which makes for a more pleasant user experience. It seems the old system with the scrambled patterns seems to be getting easier for bots and harder for humans.
noCaptcha (or the new reCaptcha) presents the user with a checkbox to tick, rather than requesting they identify some distorted text/number pattern. It looks at how the user moves their mouse and interacts with the checkbox and what it does afterwards, so something that goes in a direct line to the checkbox would be identified as a bot. I'm not sure, but I think it also takes a look at past browsing history to help determine whether the user is a human or not. Exactly how it does it is Google's secret at the moment, but it definitely seems to be a better option than the older version of reCaptcha.
In all cases, it uses the old style of reCaptcha system with the distorted letters/numbers or the new version where you identify images which match a keyphrase ("select all the pictures of cake").
This might be more secure, since reCaptcha has become quite ineffective at stopping bots from using forms, and it might be a nice little detail which makes for a more pleasant user experience. It seems the old system with the scrambled patterns seems to be getting easier for bots and harder for humans.