Comment on Why are anime catgirls blocking my access to the Linux kernel?

<- View Parent
daniskarma@lemmy.dbzer0.com ⁨1⁩ ⁨week⁩ ago

I’m against it for several reasons. Running unauthorized heavy duty code on your end. It’s not JS in order to make your site functional, it’s heavy calculations unprompted. If they would add simple button “click to run challenge” would at least be more polite and less “malware-like”.

For some old devices the challenge last over 30 seconds, I can type a captcha in less time than that.

It blocks behind the necessity to use a browser several webs that people (like the article author) tend to browse directly from a terminal.

It’s a delusion. As shown by the article author solving the PoW challenge is not that much of an added cost. Span reduction would be the same with any other novel method, crawlers are just not prepared for it. Any prepared crawler would have no issues whatsoever. People are seeing results just because it’s obscurity, not because it really works as advertised.

Take into account that the challenge needs to be light enough so a good user can enter the website in a few seconds running the challenge on a browser engine (very inefficient). A crawler interested in your site could easily put up a solution to mine the PoW using CUDA in a GPU which would be hundreds if not thousands of times more efficient. So the balance of difficulty (still browsable for users but costly to crawl) is not feasible.

It’s not universally applicable. Imagine if all internet were behind PoW challenges. It would be like constant Bitcoin mining, a total waste of resources.

The company behind Anubis seems more shady to me each day. They feed on anti-AI paranoia, they didn’t even answer the article author valid critics when he email them, they use clearly PR language aimed to convince and please certain demographics to place their product. They are full of slogans but lack substance. I just don’t trust them.

source
Sort:hotnewtop