on 13-02-2014 08:45 AM
cabbage
sorry the password must be more than 8 characters
boiled cabbage
sorry the password must contain one numerical character
1 boiled cabbage
sorry the password cannot have blank spaces
50effingboiledcabbages
sorry the password must contain at least one upper case character
50EFFINGboiledcabbages
sorry the password cannot use more than one upper case character consecutively
50EffingBoiledCabbagesShovedUpYourRearIfYouDon'tGiveMeAccessImmediately
sorry the password cannot contain punctuation
NowIAmReallyGettingPissedOff50EffingBoiledCabbagesShovedUpYourRearIfYouDon'tGiveMeAccessImmediatey
sorry that password is already in use
on 13-02-2014 08:56 AM
on 13-02-2014 09:09 AM
Still laughing Icyfroth.
EMB why is there a wheelchair next to case sensitive?
DEB
on 13-02-2014 09:38 AM
@lloydslights wrote:Still laughing Icyfroth.
EMB why is there a wheelchair next to case sensitive?
DEB
It's funny because it's to close to real life, Deb, lol.
yeah I didn't get the wheelchair thing either, emb. Didn't get the whole graphic actually.
on 13-02-2014 11:22 AM
on 13-02-2014 12:01 PM
I downloaded the Snapchat app on to my phone but I can't use it yet because I got sick of trying to find a password that was acceptable and wasn't already taken. Passwords drive me bonkers!
on 13-02-2014 12:32 PM
on 13-02-2014 01:08 PM
on 13-02-2014 02:57 PM
Another "senior moment" (2 hours) for me......got it!!!!!!
Wonderful.
DEB
on 13-02-2014 04:20 PM
Disability sign ^^ and requirement to view and type in code
CAPTCHA - this is the name for the annoying tests requiring you to enter in an often illegible string of letters and numbers before you can buy something on the web, post online messages, sign up to internet services like Skype and Gmail, subscribe to newsletters and even access online government services or contact elected officials.
They’re frustrating for all internet users, but for me and millions of other people who are blind or vision impaired, CAPTCHA tests prevent us from engaging on the web and accessing online government services, because they can't be read by screen reading software
I have been blind for about seven years and CAPTCHA has fast become one of my most hated aspects of the web.
Adding insult to injury is the fact that even the official standards body, the World Wide Web Consortium, has said CAPTCHA excludes people with disability and suggested several alternatives methods of proving web users are human. One obvious accessible alternative is a simple email activation link.
Audio CAPTCHA was supposed to solve the problem for blind or vision impaired people, but my experience with audio CAPTCHA has been almost as inaccessible as a normal visual CAPTCHA – I must have listened to the Skype audio CAPTCHA 20 times before I gave up and asked my sighted friend to set up my account.
Wayne Hawkins