The photo sharing site now has its own twist on the standard captcha to ensure you're not a bot looking to harvest user information. January 22, 2014 5:59 AM PST Pick the images with the ghosts, and you're in. (Credit: Screenshot by Lance Whitney/CNET) New users who sign up for Snapchat are now presented with a ghostly puzzle to prove their humanity. After registering with an email address, password, and birthdate, you're presented with a set of nine tiles, some with Snapchat's familiar ghost mascot and some without. Your challenge is to tap on the images with the ghosts. Do it successfully, and you gain entry. Otherwise, Snapchat denies your request and prompts you to keep trying. This latest security measure comes in the wake of the recent snafu that revealed the names and partial phone numbers of 4.6 million accounts. Since that incident, Snapchat has been trying to shore up various security holes to prevent the same problem from popping up again. Earlier this month, the company launched an update to its iOS and Android apps requiring new users to verify their phone number before accessing the Find Friends feature. The update also lets Snapchatters choose not to link their phone number with their username. The rollout of the new captcha feature follows the efforts of a 16-year-old hacker who texted Snapchat CTO Bobby Murphy about the site's ongoing vulnerabilities. The hacker uncovered Murphy's phone number after exploiting one of those vulnerabilities. Snapchat's captcha is certainly a step in the right direction. But how long will it take an enterprising hacker to find a way past this latest security measure? (Via TechCrunch)

Posted by : Unknown Wednesday, January 22, 2014

The photo sharing site now has its own twist on the standard captcha to ensure you're not a bot looking to harvest user information.



January 22, 2014 5:59 AM PST



Pick the images with the ghosts, and you're in.

Pick the images with the ghosts, and you're in.


(Credit: Screenshot by Lance Whitney/CNET)

New users who sign up for Snapchat are now presented with a ghostly puzzle to prove their humanity.


After registering with an email address, password, and birthdate, you're presented with a set of nine tiles, some with Snapchat's familiar ghost mascot and some without.


Your challenge is to tap on the images with the ghosts. Do it successfully, and you gain entry. Otherwise, Snapchat denies your request and prompts you to keep trying.


This latest security measure comes in the wake of the recent snafu that revealed the names and partial phone numbers of 4.6 million accounts. Since that incident, Snapchat has been trying to shore up various security holes to prevent the same problem from popping up again.


Earlier this month, the company launched an update to its iOS and Android apps requiring new users to verify their phone number before accessing the Find Friends feature. The update also lets Snapchatters choose not to link their phone number with their username.


The rollout of the new captcha feature follows the efforts of a 16-year-old hacker who texted Snapchat CTO Bobby Murphy about the site's ongoing vulnerabilities. The hacker uncovered Murphy's phone number after exploiting one of those vulnerabilities.


Snapchat's captcha is certainly a step in the right direction. But how long will it take an enterprising hacker to find a way past this latest security measure?


(Via TechCrunch )



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