[gui-talk] Fwd: Captchakiller.com

Mike Freeman k7uij at panix.com
Mon Mar 10 22:04:19 CDT 2008


Steve:

You are absolutely right. As you say, NFB *is* worried about the CAPTCHA 
issue. And we do urge sites to install an audio equivalent upon ocasion. 
However, we hold no illusions that this is a long-term solution to the 
problem.

Where Darrell and I may differ is in our views as to what "equal access 
with the sighted" means and to what extent this is a civil right on par 
with, say, the right to peaceably assemble to petition the government 
for redress of grievances, etc. AS I've seen you argue elsewhere, once 
we start down the philosophical road of arguing that because the sighted 
can easily do something or have automatic access to something, we, the 
blind, should *also* have such access, if necessary at societal expense, 
there's only one ultimate solution -- for us all to gain our sight. I 
think we can all readily admit that few of us will have that 
opportunity. Therefore, in treading that philosophical path, we are 
ultimately painting ourselves into a corner.

Certainly, if society says by law that we, the blind, have the right to 
a certain type of access, it goes without saying that said law should be 
enforced. But to what extent we have the right to access in cyberspace 
hasn't been fully determined yet and even then, it hasn't been 
determined whether such access should be required down to the lowest 
common denominator, i.e., everything text, or whether some savvy on the 
part of screen-readers and/or the blind users can be expected.

I agree with Darrell that it makes little sense to design sites that are 
inaccessible when accessibility is easily acommodated if done at the 
design stage. But that's *our* thinking, that is, the thinking of a 
small minority in the world. For the majority, it doesn't really matter 
and in trying to craft solutions to the problems, we should at least 
acknowledge this -- that and the fact that innovation and technological 
change cannot and probably should not be stopped so that we will always 
be behind the curve in access. Does this mean we shouldn't try to make 
things more accessible? Of course not. But, at least to my way of 
thinking, it means that we must temper our idealism with a dose of 
reality.

Aside from convenience, what drives Darrell and all other access 
advocates (including NFB) is the knowledge that certain aspects of 
electronic life are slowly being taken away from us due to changes in 
style and manner of operation of devices from computers to washers. And 
we must craft a response that has some chance of working. Determining 
what that response should be is no easy task and it is, in part, why we 
have a R&D Committee.

But I would hope that Darrell would get off his horse of thinking NFB 
"doesn't care" because staff has sighted help (as do most firms, groups 
or other endeavors). I assure him and everyone else that I lived alone 
for many years and I think he will acknowledge that my views have 
remained relatively unchanged in this area since we've argued 
good-naturedly over it for lo many years.

Steve was right: I was reacting to the one remark; I see such thinking 
as ham-stringing us in the long run.

Mike Freeman

  ----- Original Message ----- 
  From: Steve Jacobson
  To: NFBnet GUI Talk Mailing List
  Sent: Monday, March 10, 2008 12:34 PM
  Subject: Re: [gui-talk] Fwd: Captchakiller.com


  Darrell,

  Just to be sure it is clear, nobody in the NFB has said, to my 
knowledge, that we should not deal with CAPTCHA's, and I know there are 
some efforts to affect
  change.  I really don't think there is serious disagreement here so I 
don't understand the feeling that there is an argument.

  We have a whole range of problems with security schemes as you already 
know, and it is not clear how the law applies.  The existence of the 
captchakiller web site
  indicates more than anything to me that the life of captcha's is 
short, but there will probably then be something else.  We must become 
part of the equasion when
  security schemes are developed more than we are now.  I really don't 
think there is disagreement on this topic, though.

  On Mon, 10 Mar 2008 10:54:45 -0700, Darrell Shandrow wrote:

  >Hi Sherri,

  >Karen and I certainly understand your issue.  Sometimes, it seems to 
me that
  >different blind people deal with accessibility concerns at differing 
levels
  >of priority according to the number and qualification of the sighted 
people
  >around them and their willingness to be available to meet their needs 
at a
  >moment's notice.

  >I've visited the NFB national center a couple of times in the past, 
and I
  >can certainly understand why the Federation might be inconsistent and 
rather
  >spastic in the ways they do or don't prioritize equal access.  There 
are
  >plenty of sighted people who have been hired to meet the needs of Dr. 
Maurer
  >and the rest of the citizens working in those buildings.  I figure 
that,
  >once one has had a bunch of sighted people at their beck and call for
  >awhile, one probably tends to forget what it is like for the rest of 
the
  >blind population out here living in the real world.  Same is true for 
those
  >blind people who tend to lean heavily on sighted colleagues, friends 
and
  >family members to fill their access needs.




  >----- Original Message ----- 
  >From: "Sherri" <flmom2006 at gmail.com>
  >To: "NFBnet GUI Talk Mailing List" <gui-talk at nfbnet.org>
  >Sent: Monday, March 10, 2008 10:41 AM
  >Subject: Re: [gui-talk] Fwd: Captchakiller.com


  >You know, I make these somewhat tongue-in-cheek comments and it 
starts a
  >long controversial thread. What I was referring too is in my case, 
and my
  >case only, if I have to depend on someone in my family to read 
anything to
  >me, it is an arduous and frustrating task. For example, I needed to 
fill out
  >a form. I have people around who can do that. They have plenty of 
time on
  >their hands. No one would help and my financial planner finally just 
came
  >over and got the form from me and we filled it out. It took all of 
five
  >minutes. If I had the funds, I would hire a sighted reader, a driver, 
etc.,
  >but I don't so it isn't an option for me, so I am glad for the 
software I
  >have that does allow me to read my mail. And that's my two cents 
worth.

  >Sherri
  >----- Original Message ----- 
  >From: "Joel Deutsch" <jdeutsch at dslextreme.com>
  >To: "NFBnet GUI Talk Mailing List" <gui-talk at nfbnet.org>
  >Sent: Monday, March 10, 2008 12:34 PM
  >Subject: Re: [gui-talk] Fwd: Captchakiller.com


  >Hi Raul,

  >First of all, let me say that I don't have a dog in this fight, as 
the
  >expression goes. If someone feels comfortable using a sighted reader 
in an
  >instance like this, fine with me. If they don't begrudge this 
approach to
  >someone else, but feel strongly that it's not only more efficient but 
more
  >dignified to be able to overcome the CAPTCHA obstacle all by 
themselves,
  >either by pressuring for audio links or finding a way to break the 
system,
  >also fine by me.

  >But I think the folks who are objecting to the "sighted reader" 
approach (I
  >think of this role more as " that of a sighted accomplice, for some 
reason)
  >must feel that the goal of independence means not having to ask 
another
  >person for assistance if at all possible. that's why it matters so 
much to
  >them, seems like a capitulation and, possibly, even a humiliation.

  >as someone who's in the process of going blind by degrees (I'm using 
"blind"
  >in the most conventional meaning, here), one of the biggest 
challenges I've
  >faced over the past few years since my vision crossed the line from 
being
  >too poor to drive or make sense of movies to rendering me unable to 
perform
  >many more tasks was that of having to learn to ask others for help. 
And I
  >have found that although I'm happy to have something like Jaws at my
  >disposal so I don't require a sighted reader for the vast majority of 
my
  >usual reading needs,in other situations, such as shopping for 
groceries at
  >my local food markets, I've not only given in to asking to have 
someone
  >assigned to me to go around and pluck items off the shelves and put 
them
  >into the shopping basket, I more often than not feel enriched by the
  >interaction,. It took some time to accept feeling like this instead 
of the
  >shame and irrational resentment I felt at first-- I mean resentment 
against
  >those who were helping me-- and get over the undeniable loss of 
anonymity
  >(which is really prized by most people when they have to run their 
errands;
  >you drive alone to some store, wrestle a shopping cart out of the 
parked
  >stack, wheel it around the store raving things and tossing them into 
the
  >cart, and check out at the cashier line, and maybe that cashier is 
the only
  >person you acknowledge with at least a "how ya doing today" and a 
smile
  >before taking your bags and tossing them into your car. You haven't 
been
  >forced to interact with anyone else unless you really wanted to 
discuss the
  >French wines with the man who was standing beside you at that display 
or
  >flirt with the woman whose eyes met yours over the watermelons). Some
  >sighted people these days manage to even get past the cashier without 
a real
  >affirmation that it's a fellow human being they're dealing with, but 
rather
  >talk on their cell phones while they watch the total come up on the 
cash
  >register and whip out money to pay with, exchanging nothing but a 
glance
  >with the cashier that says "here's the dough, now let's have my 
change."
  >This is the kind of privacy and anonymity in a public situation that 
most
  >people in the U.S., at least, prize as a social birthright. And 
disability
  >robs you of that, as well as rendering something like grocery 
shopping
  >massively inefficient and time-consuming compared to before, if 
you're
  >experiencing what I've been experiencing over recent years. for me, 
that's
  >still a bummer. but not the part about learning to reach out and ask 
for
  >assistance and then interrelate a little with the person who helps 
me.
  >That's all been an enrichment, despite my regrets. It took me a long 
time to
  >get to feeling this, though, I admit. Just saying this stuff in case 
anyone
  >else might be heartened to hear it.

  >And the same with voting. Let's be realistic. I don't go to vote in a
  >precinct where my vote is likely to arouse hostility on a helper's 
part,
  >whether or not someone else might even care about that. I live in an 
area
  >that's basically politically friendly for someone of my political 
bent.
  >whether or not everyone agrees on this state proposition or that 
candidate
  >for office. If I lived in a more threatening locale, I might wish 
more
  >fervently to have private voting access, but that's not my situation.

  >And I'll also confess that the way I deal with the occasional CAPTCHA 
that
  >flummoxes me is to email a close friend, give him the user ID and 
pass I'm
  >using on that site, and have him log in for me so I can do whatever 
it was I
  >was trying to do. I don't feel diminished by that. But I'm also happy 
that
  >people campaign to get Web masters to reform on this issue by adding 
audio.
  >Both, not just this or that, black and white.

  >Just a personal observation. I know that others may feel differently, 
and
  >I'm not trying to argue or rally anyone to my side. I just felt 
inspired to
  >share my own experience of something like this in all its meaning 
beyond
  >some political correctness issue.

  >----- Original Message ----- 
  >From: "Raul A. Gallegos" <raul at asmodean.net>
  >To: "NFBnet GUI Talk Mailing List" <gui-talk at nfbnet.org>
  >Sent: Monday, March 10, 2008 3:51 AM
  >Subject: Re: [gui-talk] Fwd: Captchakiller.com


  >I think it's rather amusing how the informative nature of the 
original
  >post has to degrade as to whether using sighted readers is good, bad,
  >honorable, silly, or something else not mentioned as yet. Come on 
folks.
  >Whether you use the killer site or not, or whether you always use
  >readers or not, what it comes down to is if you get the job done in 
any
  >way you can, that is what makes you independent. So, let's not split 
hairs.

  >ryan perdue said the following on 3/10/2008 3:03 AM:
  >> Mike, why would it be an honorable thing?
  >> Sometimes, it's easy to feel like you're getting in someone's way, 
that
  >> would make it worse.
  >> Accessibility is a right and we need to be able to live 
independently as
  >> much as possible.
  >> ----- Original Message ----- 
  >> From: "Darrell Shandrow" <darrell.shandrow at gmail.com>
  >> To: "NFBnet GUI Talk Mailing List" <gui-talk at nfbnet.org>
  >> Sent: Monday, March 10, 2008 2:11 AM
  >> Subject: Re: [gui-talk] Fwd: Captchakiller.com
  >>
  >>
  >>> Hello Mike,
  >>>
  >>> I see you trotting out this "sighted reader" argument quite often.
  >>> That's
  >>> all fine and good, but...
  >>>
  >>> Why should there be screen readers and other assistive 
technologies for
  >>> the
  >>> blind?  Couldn't one just avail themselves of a sighted reader?
  >>>
  >>> Why should there be accessible voting?  Why should the election 
officials
  >>> have to help us vote?  Shouldn't we all be required to bring our 
trusty
  >>> sighted reader with us?
  >>>
  >>> Why should anyone purchase a K-NFB reader when they can plunk even 
more
  >>> money down over their lifetime to hire the services of a more 
reliable
  >>> sighted reader?
  >>>
  >>>
  >>> ----- Original Message ----- 
  >>> From: "Mike Freeman" <k7uij at panix.com>
  >>> To: "NFBnet GUI Talk Mailing List" <gui-talk at nfbnet.org>
  >>> Sent: Sunday, March 09, 2008 8:21 PM
  >>> Subject: Re: [gui-talk] Fwd: Captchakiller.com
  >>>
  >>>
  >>> Now waaaait a minute here.
  >>>
  >>> I agree that the site is progress. But using sighted readers is an
  >>> honorable thing!
  >>>
  >>> Mike
  >>>
  >>>  ----- Original Message ----- 
  >>>  From: Sherri
  >>>  To: NFBnet GUI Talk Mailing List
  >>>  Sent: Sunday, March 09, 2008 8:06 PM
  >>>  Subject: Re: [gui-talk] Fwd: Captchakiller.com
  >>>
  >>>
  >>>  Hey, anything's better than having to wait for a sighted person!
  >>> Thanks.
  >>>  I'll give it a try.
  >>>  ----- Original Message ----- 
  >>>  From: "Steve Pattison" <srp at internode.on.net>
  >>>  To: "GUI Talk" <gui-talk at nfbnet.org>; "Access-L"
  >>> <access-l at access-l.com>
  >>>  Sent: Sunday, March 09, 2008 10:44 PM
  >>>  Subject: [gui-talk] Fwd: Captchakiller.com
  >>>
  >>>
  >>>  Sent: Sunday, 9 March 2008 9:33 AM
  >>>
  >>>  Today, I heard about this site on another list, and I love it. 
If you
  >>>  ever
  >>>  need to use a site that requires captchas,
  >>>  you will to.  The url is
  >>>
  >>>  www.captchakiller.com
  >>>
  >>>  The first thing you will have to do is sign up for an account. 
On the
  >>>  home
  >>>  page, they have a lot of forum posts and
  >>>  comments, but if you look for the crate an account link, you 
should
  >>> have
  >>>  no
  >>>  problems at all.
  >>>
  >>>  Once you have an account, you can upload those bothersome 
captchas,
  >>> and
  >>>  the
  >>>  site will process them for you.
  >>>
  >>>  I had a little trouble at first, but once you realize what they 
want,
  >>>  it's
  >>>  fairly straight forward.
  >>>
  >>>  I'll give you the step by step instructions.
  >>>  1.  go to the site that has the captcha.
  >>>  2. find the exact page that has the captcha, and copy the url 
that's
  >>> in
  >>>  the
  >>>  address bar.
  >>>  3.  find the captcha on the page, and right click on it.
  >>>  4.  choose the save picture as option and save it to your hard 
drive.
  >>>  5.  on the captchakiller site, choose the upload captcha link.
  >>>  6.  paste the page url into the url field.
  >>>  7. hit the browse button on the page, and browse to the file you 
saved
  >>>  on
  >>>  your computer.
  >>>  8.  after hitting open on the file, hit the submit button on the 
page.
  >>>  9.  then choose the view captchas link on the page, and find the 
most
  >>>  recently uploaded one.  It should be the one at
  >>>  the top.
  >>>  10 when you go through the table you'll result, and beside that 
is
  >>> what
  >>>  you
  >>>  have to type in for the captcha.
  >>>
  >>>  This may sound a little complex, but it isn't so bad once you get 
used
  >>>  to
  >>>  doing it.  I'm not saying it's a solution to
  >>>  all our captcha problems, but it sure beats getting sighted help 
every
  >>>  time
  >>>  you need a captcha interpreted.
  >>>
  >>>  Another helpful hint I can give you, is to keep the captchakiller
  >>> site,
  >>>  and
  >>>  the site you want the captcha for, opened at
  >>>  the same time.  That way, you can get the captcha processed 
quickly
  >>> and
  >>>  enter it on the site before it expires.
  >>>
  >>>  Hopefully, some people will find this site useful.
  >>>  --------
  >>>  Earle
  >>>  Skype, Twitter, and Yahoo:  rowdyamerican
  >>>  MSN:  peterson_33 at sympatico.ca
  >>>  Aim:  rowdyamerican28
  >>>  ICQ:  155852055
  >>>
  >>>  Regards Steve
  >>>  Email:  srp at internode.on.net
  >>>  Windows Live Messenger:  internetuser383 at hotmail.com
  >>>  Skype:  steve1963
  >>>  _______________________________________________
  >>>  gui-talk mailing list
  >>>  gui-talk at nfbnet.org
  >>>  http://www.nfbnet.org/mailman/listinfo/gui-talk
  >>>
  >>>  _______________________________________________
  >>>  gui-talk mailing list
  >>>  gui-talk at nfbnet.org
  >>>  http://www.nfbnet.org/mailman/listinfo/gui-talk
  >>>
  >>>
  >>>
  >>> --------------------------------------------------------------------------------
  >>>
  >>>
  >>> _______________________________________________
  >>> gui-talk mailing list
  >>> gui-talk at nfbnet.org
  >>> http://www.nfbnet.org/mailman/listinfo/gui-talk
  >>>
  >>> _______________________________________________
  >>> gui-talk mailing list
  >>> gui-talk at nfbnet.org
  >>> http://www.nfbnet.org/mailman/listinfo/gui-talk
  >>
  >> _______________________________________________
  >> gui-talk mailing list
  >> gui-talk at nfbnet.org
  >> http://www.nfbnet.org/mailman/listinfo/gui-talk


  >-- 
  >Raul A. Gallegos -- http://www.asmodean.net
  >_______________________________________________
  >gui-talk mailing list
  >gui-talk at nfbnet.org
  >http://www.nfbnet.org/mailman/listinfo/gui-talk

  >_______________________________________________
  >gui-talk mailing list
  >gui-talk at nfbnet.org
  >http://www.nfbnet.org/mailman/listinfo/gui-talk

  >_______________________________________________
  >gui-talk mailing list
  >gui-talk at nfbnet.org
  >http://www.nfbnet.org/mailman/listinfo/gui-talk

  >_______________________________________________
  >gui-talk mailing list
  >gui-talk at nfbnet.org
  >http://www.nfbnet.org/mailman/listinfo/gui-talk




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-------------- next part --------------
Steve:
 
You are absolutely right. As you say, NFB *is* worried about the CAPTCHA issue. And we do urge sites to install an audio equivalent upon ocasion. However, we hold no illusions that this is a long-term solution to the problem.
 
Where Darrell and I may differ is in our views as to what "equal access with the sighted" means and to what extent this is a civil right on par with, say, the right to peaceably assemble to petition the government for redress of grievances, etc. AS I've seen you argue elsewhere, once we start down the philosophical road of arguing that because the sighted can easily do something or have automatic access to something, we, the blind, should *also* have such access, if necessary at societal expense, there's only one ultimate solution -- for us all to gain our sight. I think we can all readily admit that few of us will have that opportunity. Therefore, in treading that philosophical path, we are ultimately painting ourselves into a corner.
 
Certainly, if society says by law that we, the blind, have the right to a certain type of access, it goes without saying that said law should be enforced. But to what extent we have the right to access in cyberspace hasn't been fully determined yet and even then, it hasn't been determined whether such access should be required down to the lowest common denominator, i.e., everything text, or whether some savvy on the part of screen-readers and/or the blind users can be expected.
 
I agree with Darrell that it makes little sense to design sites that are inaccessible when accessibility is easily acommodated if done at the design stage. But that's *our* thinking, that is, the thinking of a small minority in the world. For the majority, it doesn't really matter and in trying to craft solutions to the problems, we should at least acknowledge this -- that and the fact that innovation and technological change cannot and probably should not be stopped so that we will always be behind the curve in access. Does this mean we shouldn't try to make things more accessible? Of course not. But, at least to my way of thinking, it means that we must temper our idealism with a dose of reality.
 
Aside from convenience, what drives Darrell and all other access advocates (including NFB) is the knowledge that certain aspects of electronic life are slowly being taken away from us due to changes in style and manner of operation of devices from computers to washers. And we must craft a response that has some chance of working. Determining what that response should be is no easy task and it is, in part, why we have a R&D Committee.
 
But I would hope that Darrell would get off his horse of thinking NFB "doesn't care" because staff has sighted help (as do most firms, groups or other endeavors). I assure him and everyone else that I lived alone for many years and I think he will acknowledge that my views have remained relatively unchanged in this area since we've argued good-naturedly over it for lo many years.
 
Steve was right: I was reacting to the one remark; I see such thinking as ham-stringing us in the long run.
 
Mike Freeman
 
----- Original Message -----
From:
mailto:steve.jacobson at visi.com Steve Jacobson
To:
mailto:gui-talk at nfbnet.org NFBnet GUI Talk Mailing List
Sent:
Monday, March 10, 2008 12:34 PM
Subject:
Re: [gui-talk] Fwd: Captchakiller.com
Darrell,
Just to be sure it is clear, nobody in the NFB has said, to my knowledge, that we should not deal with CAPTCHA's, and I know there are some efforts to affect
change.  I really don't think there is serious disagreement here so I don't understand the feeling that there is an argument. 
We have a whole range of problems with security schemes as you already know, and it is not clear how the law applies.  The existence of the captchakiller web site
indicates more than anything to me that the life of captcha's is short, but there will probably then be something else.  We must become part of the equasion when
security schemes are developed more than we are now.  I really don't think there is disagreement on this topic, though.
On Mon, 10 Mar 2008 10:54:45 -0700, Darrell Shandrow wrote:
>Hi Sherri,
>Karen and I certainly understand your issue.  Sometimes, it seems to me that
>different blind people deal with accessibility concerns at differing levels
>of priority according to the number and qualification of the sighted people
>around them and their willingness to be available to meet their needs at a
>moment's notice.
>I've visited the NFB national center a couple of times in the past, and I
>can certainly understand why the Federation might be inconsistent and rather
>spastic in the ways they do or don't prioritize equal access.  There are
>plenty of sighted people who have been hired to meet the needs of Dr. Maurer
>and the rest of the citizens working in those buildings.  I figure that,
>once one has had a bunch of sighted people at their beck and call for
>awhile, one probably tends to forget what it is like for the rest of the
>blind population out here living in the real world.  Same is true for those
>blind people who tend to lean heavily on sighted colleagues, friends and
>family members to fill their access needs.
>----- Original Message -----
>From: "Sherri" < mailto:flmom2006 at gmail.com flmom2006 at gmail.com
>
>To: "NFBnet GUI Talk Mailing List" < mailto:gui-talk at nfbnet.org gui-talk at nfbnet.org
>
>Sent: Monday, March 10, 2008 10:41 AM
>Subject: Re: [gui-talk] Fwd: Captchakiller.com
>You know, I make these somewhat tongue-in-cheek comments and it starts a
>long controversial thread. What I was referring too is in my case, and my
>case only, if I have to depend on someone in my family to read anything to
>me, it is an arduous and frustrating task. For example, I needed to fill out
>a form. I have people around who can do that. They have plenty of time on
>their hands. No one would help and my financial planner finally just came
>over and got the form from me and we filled it out. It took all of five
>minutes. If I had the funds, I would hire a sighted reader, a driver, etc.,
>but I don't so it isn't an option for me, so I am glad for the software I
>have that does allow me to read my mail. And that's my two cents worth.
>Sherri
>----- Original Message -----
>From: "Joel Deutsch" < mailto:jdeutsch at dslextreme.com jdeutsch at dslextreme.com
>
>To: "NFBnet GUI Talk Mailing List" < mailto:gui-talk at nfbnet.org gui-talk at nfbnet.org
>
>Sent: Monday, March 10, 2008 12:34 PM
>Subject: Re: [gui-talk] Fwd: Captchakiller.com
>Hi Raul,
>First of all, let me say that I don't have a dog in this fight, as the
>expression goes. If someone feels comfortable using a sighted reader in an
>instance like this, fine with me. If they don't begrudge this approach to
>someone else, but feel strongly that it's not only more efficient but more
>dignified to be able to overcome the CAPTCHA obstacle all by themselves,
>either by pressuring for audio links or finding a way to break the system,
>also fine by me.
>But I think the folks who are objecting to the "sighted reader" approach (I
>think of this role more as " that of a sighted accomplice, for some reason)
>must feel that the goal of independence means not having to ask another
>person for assistance if at all possible. that's why it matters so much to
>them, seems like a capitulation and, possibly, even a humiliation.
>as someone who's in the process of going blind by degrees (I'm using "blind"
>in the most conventional meaning, here), one of the biggest challenges I've
>faced over the past few years since my vision crossed the line from being
>too poor to drive or make sense of movies to rendering me unable to perform
>many more tasks was that of having to learn to ask others for help. And I
>have found that although I'm happy to have something like Jaws at my
>disposal so I don't require a sighted reader for the vast majority of my
>usual reading needs,in other situations, such as shopping for groceries at
>my local food markets, I've not only given in to asking to have someone
>assigned to me to go around and pluck items off the shelves and put them
>into the shopping basket, I more often than not feel enriched by the
>interaction,. It took some time to accept feeling like this instead of the
>shame and irrational resentment I felt at first-- I mean resentment against
>those who were helping me-- and get over the undeniable loss of anonymity
>(which is really prized by most people when they have to run their errands;
>you drive alone to some store, wrestle a shopping cart out of the parked
>stack, wheel it around the store raving things and tossing them into the
>cart, and check out at the cashier line, and maybe that cashier is the only
>person you acknowledge with at least a "how ya doing today" and a smile
>before taking your bags and tossing them into your car. You haven't been
>forced to interact with anyone else unless you really wanted to discuss the
>French wines with the man who was standing beside you at that display or
>flirt with the woman whose eyes met yours over the watermelons). Some
>sighted people these days manage to even get past the cashier without a real
>affirmation that it's a fellow human being they're dealing with, but rather
>talk on their cell phones while they watch the total come up on the cash
>register and whip out money to pay with, exchanging nothing but a glance
>with the cashier that says "here's the dough, now let's have my change."
>This is the kind of privacy and anonymity in a public situation that most
>people in the U.S., at least, prize as a social birthright. And disability
>robs you of that, as well as rendering something like grocery shopping
>massively inefficient and time-consuming compared to before, if you're
>experiencing what I've been experiencing over recent years. for me, that's
>still a bummer. but not the part about learning to reach out and ask for
>assistance and then interrelate a little with the person who helps me.
>That's all been an enrichment, despite my regrets. It took me a long time to
>get to feeling this, though, I admit. Just saying this stuff in case anyone
>else might be heartened to hear it.
>And the same with voting. Let's be realistic. I don't go to vote in a
>precinct where my vote is likely to arouse hostility on a helper's part,
>whether or not someone else might even care about that. I live in an area
>that's basically politically friendly for someone of my political bent.
>whether or not everyone agrees on this state proposition or that candidate
>for office. If I lived in a more threatening locale, I might wish more
>fervently to have private voting access, but that's not my situation.
>And I'll also confess that the way I deal with the occasional CAPTCHA that
>flummoxes me is to email a close friend, give him the user ID and pass I'm
>using on that site, and have him log in for me so I can do whatever it was I
>was trying to do. I don't feel diminished by that. But I'm also happy that
>people campaign to get Web masters to reform on this issue by adding audio.
>Both, not just this or that, black and white.
>Just a personal observation. I know that others may feel differently, and
>I'm not trying to argue or rally anyone to my side. I just felt inspired to
>share my own experience of something like this in all its meaning beyond
>some political correctness issue.
>----- Original Message -----
>From: "Raul A. Gallegos" < mailto:raul at asmodean.net raul at asmodean.net
>
>To: "NFBnet GUI Talk Mailing List" < mailto:gui-talk at nfbnet.org gui-talk at nfbnet.org
>
>Sent: Monday, March 10, 2008 3:51 AM
>Subject: Re: [gui-talk] Fwd: Captchakiller.com
>I think it's rather amusing how the informative nature of the original
>post has to degrade as to whether using sighted readers is good, bad,
>honorable, silly, or something else not mentioned as yet. Come on folks.
>Whether you use the killer site or not, or whether you always use
>readers or not, what it comes down to is if you get the job done in any
>way you can, that is what makes you independent. So, let's not split hairs.
>ryan perdue said the following on 3/10/2008 3:03 AM:
>> Mike, why would it be an honorable thing?
>> Sometimes, it's easy to feel like you're getting in someone's way, that
>> would make it worse.
>> Accessibility is a right and we need to be able to live independently as
>> much as possible.
>> ----- Original Message -----
>> From: "Darrell Shandrow" < mailto:darrell.shandrow at gmail.com darrell.shandrow at gmail.com
>
>> To: "NFBnet GUI Talk Mailing List" < mailto:gui-talk at nfbnet.org gui-talk at nfbnet.org
>
>> Sent: Monday, March 10, 2008 2:11 AM
>> Subject: Re: [gui-talk] Fwd: Captchakiller.com
>>
>>
>>> Hello Mike,
>>>
>>> I see you trotting out this "sighted reader" argument quite often.
>>> That's
>>> all fine and good, but...
>>>
>>> Why should there be screen readers and other assistive technologies for
>>> the
>>> blind?  Couldn't one just avail themselves of a sighted reader?
>>>
>>> Why should there be accessible voting?  Why should the election officials
>>> have to help us vote?  Shouldn't we all be required to bring our trusty
>>> sighted reader with us?
>>>
>>> Why should anyone purchase a K-NFB reader when they can plunk even more
>>> money down over their lifetime to hire the services of a more reliable
>>> sighted reader?
>>>
>>>
>>> ----- Original Message -----
>>> From: "Mike Freeman" < mailto:k7uij at panix.com k7uij at panix.com
>
>>> To: "NFBnet GUI Talk Mailing List" < mailto:gui-talk at nfbnet.org gui-talk at nfbnet.org
>
>>> Sent: Sunday, March 09, 2008 8:21 PM
>>> Subject: Re: [gui-talk] Fwd: Captchakiller.com
>>>
>>>
>>> Now waaaait a minute here.
>>>
>>> I agree that the site is progress. But using sighted readers is an
>>> honorable thing!
>>>
>>> Mike
>>>
>>>  ----- Original Message -----
>>>  From: Sherri
>>>  To: NFBnet GUI Talk Mailing List
>>>  Sent: Sunday, March 09, 2008 8:06 PM
>>>  Subject: Re: [gui-talk] Fwd: Captchakiller.com
>>>
>>>
>>>  Hey, anything's better than having to wait for a sighted person!
>>> Thanks.
>>>  I'll give it a try.
>>>  ----- Original Message -----
>>>  From: "Steve Pattison" < mailto:srp at internode.on.net srp at internode.on.net
>
>>>  To: "GUI Talk" < mailto:gui-talk at nfbnet.org gui-talk at nfbnet.org
>; "Access-L"
>>> < mailto:access-l at access-l.com access-l at access-l.com
>
>>>  Sent: Sunday, March 09, 2008 10:44 PM
>>>  Subject: [gui-talk] Fwd: Captchakiller.com
>>>
>>>
>>>  Sent: Sunday, 9 March 2008 9:33 AM
>>>
>>>  Today, I heard about this site on another list, and I love it.  If you
>>>  ever
>>>  need to use a site that requires captchas,
>>>  you will to.  The url is
>>>
>>>  http://www.captchakiller.com www.captchakiller.com
>>>
>>>  The first thing you will have to do is sign up for an account.  On the
>>>  home
>>>  page, they have a lot of forum posts and
>>>  comments, but if you look for the crate an account link, you should
>>> have
>>>  no
>>>  problems at all.
>>>
>>>  Once you have an account, you can upload those bothersome captchas,
>>> and
>>>  the
>>>  site will process them for you.
>>>
>>>  I had a little trouble at first, but once you realize what they want,
>>>  it's
>>>  fairly straight forward.
>>>
>>>  I'll give you the step by step instructions.
>>>  1.  go to the site that has the captcha.
>>>  2. find the exact page that has the captcha, and copy the url that's
>>> in
>>>  the
>>>  address bar.
>>>  3.  find the captcha on the page, and right click on it.
>>>  4.  choose the save picture as option and save it to your hard drive.
>>>  5.  on the captchakiller site, choose the upload captcha link.
>>>  6.  paste the page url into the url field.
>>>  7. hit the browse button on the page, and browse to the file you saved
>>>  on
>>>  your computer.
>>>  8.  after hitting open on the file, hit the submit button on the page.
>>>  9.  then choose the view captchas link on the page, and find the most
>>>  recently uploaded one.  It should be the one at
>>>  the top.
>>>  10 when you go through the table you'll result, and beside that is
>>> what
>>>  you
>>>  have to type in for the captcha.
>>>
>>>  This may sound a little complex, but it isn't so bad once you get used
>>>  to
>>>  doing it.  I'm not saying it's a solution to
>>>  all our captcha problems, but it sure beats getting sighted help every
>>>  time
>>>  you need a captcha interpreted.
>>>
>>>  Another helpful hint I can give you, is to keep the captchakiller
>>> site,
>>>  and
>>>  the site you want the captcha for, opened at
>>>  the same time.  That way, you can get the captcha processed quickly
>>> and
>>>  enter it on the site before it expires.
>>>
>>>  Hopefully, some people will find this site useful.
>>>  --------
>>>  Earle
>>>  Skype, Twitter, and Yahoo:  rowdyamerican
>>>  MSN:  mailto:peterson_33 at sympatico.ca peterson_33 at sympatico.ca
>>>  Aim:  rowdyamerican28
>>>  ICQ:  155852055
>>>
>>>  Regards Steve
>>>  Email:  mailto:srp at internode.on.net srp at internode.on.net
>>>  Windows Live Messenger:  mailto:internetuser383 at hotmail.com internetuser383 at hotmail.com
>>>  Skype:  steve1963
>>>  _______________________________________________
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>>>  http://www.nfbnet.org/mailman/listinfo/gui-talk http://www.nfbnet.org/mailman/listinfo/gui-talk
>>>
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>>>
>>>
>>>
>>> --------------------------------------------------------------------------------
>>>
>>>
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>>
>> _______________________________________________
>> gui-talk mailing list
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>--
>Raul A. Gallegos -- http://www.asmodean.net http://www.asmodean.net
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