The term “CAPTCHA” was created in 2000 by Luis von Ahn, Manuel Blum, Nicholas J. Hopper of Carnegie Mellon University.
CAPTCHA code was created to stop automated computer spam robots from filling out forms, harvesting email addresses, and then sending out countless spam emails.
A CAPTCHA is a program that protects websites against bots by generating and grading tests that humans can pass but current computer programs cannot. For example, humans can read distorted text as the one shown below, but current computer programs can’t:
The term CAPTCHA (for Completely Automated Turing Test To Tell Computers and Humans Apart) was coined in 2000 by Luis von Ahn, Manuel Blum, Nicholas Hopper and John Langford of Carnegie Mellon University. At the time, they developed the first CAPTCHA to be used by Yahoo.
captcha
A captcha working eg :
Applications of CAPTCHAs
Preventing Comment Spam in Blogs. Most bloggers are familiar with programs that submit bogus comments, usually for the purpose of raising search engine ranks of some website (e.g., “buy penny stocks here”). This is called comment spam. By using a CAPTCHA, only humans can enter comments on a blog. There is no need to make users sign up before they enter a comment, and no legitimate comments are ever lost!
Protecting Website Registration. Several companies (Yahoo!, Microsoft, etc.) offer free email services. Up until a few years ago, most of these services suffered from a specific type of attack: “bots” that would sign up for thousands of email accounts every minute. The solution to this problem was to use CAPTCHAs to ensure that only humans obtain free accounts. In general, free services should be protected with a CAPTCHA in order to prevent abuse by automated scripts
Protecting Email Addresses From Scrapers. Spammers crawl the Web in search of email addresses posted in clear text. CAPTCHAs provide an effective mechanism to hide your email address from Web scrapers. The idea is to require users to solve a CAPTCHA before showing your email address. A free and secure implementation that uses CAPTCHAs to obfuscate an email address can be found at reCAPTCHA MailHide.
Online Polls. In November 1999, http://www.slashdot.org/ released an online poll asking which was the best graduate school in computer science (a dangerous question to ask over the web!). As is the case with most online polls, IP addresses of voters were recorded in order to prevent single users from voting more than once. However, students at Carnegie Mellon found a way to stuff the ballots using programs that voted for CMU thousands of times. CMU’s score started growing rapidly. The next day, students at MIT wrote their own program and the poll became a contest between voting “bots.” MIT finished with 21,156 votes, Carnegie Mellon with 21,032 and every other school with less than 1,000. Can the result of any online poll be trusted? Not unless the poll ensures that only humans can vote.
Preventing Dictionary Attacks. CAPTCHAs can also be used to prevent dictionary attacks in password systems. The idea is simple: prevent a computer from being able to iterate through the entire space of passwords by requiring it to solve a CAPTCHA after a certain number of unsuccessful logins. This is better than the classic approach of locking an account after a sequence of unsuccessful logins, since doing so allows an attacker to lock accounts at will.
Search Engine Bots. It is sometimes desirable to keep webpages unindexed to prevent others from finding them easily. There is an html tag to prevent search engine bots from reading web pages. The tag, however, doesn’t guarantee that bots won’t read a web page; it only serves to say “no bots, please.” Search engine bots, since they usually belong to large companies, respect web pages that don’t want to allow them in. However, in order to truly guarantee that bots won’t enter a web site, CAPTCHAs are needed.
Worms and Spam. CAPTCHAs also offer a plausible solution against email worms and spam: “I will only accept an email if I know there is a human behind the other computer.” A few companies are already marketing this idea.
def of CAPTCHA taken from : http://www.bestwebforms.com/what_is_captcha.php

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vow!! truly goann catch a “captcha”. it’s truly a great invention.
still sometimes in some websites, the captchas are very difficult to identify, what has been written there.. i have always doubted whether they are trying to discourage people to used their services givng this much tough, un-perceivable “CAPTCHAS”. Some times, security itself become a threat!!
the write-up gives a wonderful info.. thank you Lazy Sam,
Sam is not always lazy..
good article…!!!!!!
very informative!! thanks for sharing
good article,
@hari nowadays many website contain sound cpatcha , if u can’t read click on sound , we can hear the letters
and different types of captcha available like – color display – and we
write color names, and a small calculator are some eg
Well written response. With the number and capabilities now presented by bots even the better captchas are being circumvented. So the distortion of the characters of the captcha are made harder for bots, but that makes the captcha harder for humans.
To that end there is a new free image based captcha that is easy for humans and harder for bots. Check out Confident CAPTCHA from confidenttechnologies.com.
good article,
nice and informative…
good work…
simple and informative
My cousin recommended this blog and she was totally right keep up the fantastic work!