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OneZero is a former publication from Medium about the impact of technology on people and the future. Currently inactive and not taking submissions.

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Why CAPTCHA Pictures Are So Unbearably Depressing

7 min readAug 5, 2021

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I hate doing Google’s CAPTCHAs.

Part of it is the sheer hassle of repeatedly identifying objects — traffic lights, staircases, palm trees and buses — just so I can finish a web search. I also don’t like being forced to donate free labor to AI companies to help train their visual-recognition systems.

But a while ago, while numbly clicking on grainy images of fire hydrants, I was struck by another reason:

The images are deeply, overwhelmingly depressing.

CAPTCHA images are never joyful vistas of human activity, full of Whitmanesque vigor. No, they’re blurry, anonymous landscapes that possess a positively Soviet anomie. Here’s a typical one …

You can feel your spirits deflate just beholding this picture, can’t you? Even worse, really, are the jumble of bleak images …

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OneZero
OneZero

Published in OneZero

OneZero is a former publication from Medium about the impact of technology on people and the future. Currently inactive and not taking submissions.

Clive Thompson
Clive Thompson

Written by Clive Thompson

Tech, science, culture -- and how they collide. Writer at NYT mag/Wired; author, “Coders”. Mastodon: @clive@saturation.social; clive@clivethompson.net

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