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They were trying to measure the worker's native language by assuming error rates would go down. One provider had low error rates across the board - the easiest explanation for this is a different incentive system that promoted low error rates, likely at the expense of speed. I'd guess this was one of the expensive service providers, and is how they try to differentiate themselves in the market.



Wouldn't they throw aside a Klingon sample rather than spend time trying to decipher it? CAPTCHAs are supposed to expire after a minute or two.

I'm assuming the Klingon was written in the Klingon alphabet, though, which (as I realized after reading Tycho's post) could be wrong. If it was written in the Latin alphabet, then a person could easily have solved it letter-by-letter in a few seconds.


Yeah. I was assuming it was in a latin alphabet but I was wrong. I just read the paper, it was in a klingon alphabet, so essentially arbitrary symbols. So my guess was wrong, it's difficult to see an explanation here that makes any financial sense. Apparently they concluded that they were other researchers? I suppose you could imagine the results in some sort of auction system that ended up paying a lot (more than they were making) for problems no one else was willing to solve. But that doesn't seem too likely.




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