Google audio security measure broken, or so we hear
The distorted images websites use for logins, known as captchas, or Completely Automated Public Turing test to Tell Computers and Humans Apart, work by distorting a set of numbers and letters in such a way that only humans would recognize them. For blind Internet users, websites use audible captchas, which do the same thing with sound. For a while, both types effectively prevented spammers from registering Gmail addresses with automated scripts. But Russians looking for a little extra cash — about $3 a day — helped crooks break Google's image captchas earlier this year. Now Wintercore Labs says Google's audio captchas are broken too. IDG reports:
There are repeatable patterns evident in the audio file and by applying a set of complex but straightforward processes, a library can be built of the basic signal for each possible character that can appear in the captcha.