People are playing a new DOOM-themed CAPTCHA

CAPTCHA programs that are used to determine whether a site visitor is a person or a bot come in pretty standard formats. Think text distortion (where users type the characters they see in a box amid other squiggles); image recognition (you’re selecting, say, all the squares in a grid with a bicycle image); and checkbox verification (you click on that box that reads: “I am not a robot”). 

But Guillermo Rauch, CEO of Vercel, a frontend-as-a-service product, just used the company’s AI site builder to  come up with a new twist on CAPTCHAs, one that invites users to play the classic single-player game DOOM and killing at least three monsters. You can check it out here.

It’s not a wholly original idea (the DOOM as CAPTCHA part). But it’s nevertheless topping the charts over at Hacker News, whose audience of largely developers has notes, with some complaining it’s too hard, another complimenting the project as “so metal,” and another remarking: “There are so many monsters, took me 3-4 tries…just like a real captcha!”

Related Content

An interview with YouTube CEO Neal Mohan on rolling out AI tools without upsetting creators, and more; YouTube has paid $70B to partners in the past three years (Stephen Morris/Financial Times)

The GMCI Meme index, which tracks leading memecoins by market cap, delivered 320% returns in 2024, outpacing AI at 91% and the top 30 cryptocurrencies at 88% (The Block)

Alibaba Cloud partners with 01.AI, the Beijing-based AI unicorn founded by former Google China head Kai-Fu Lee, to set up an "industrial large model laboratory" (Ann Cao/South China Morning Post)

Leave a Comment