Description
Anti-Captcha is a transparent spam solution that does not require any end-user interaction.
It is based on a nonce key, which is dynamically inserted using randomly generated (and obfuscated) javascript.
The aim of this plugin is to prevent automated attacks (by bots) on the following WordPress actions:
- Posting comments
- Registering for a new account
- Requesting a lost password
When a comment is posted without a valid Anti-Captcha token, it shall be instantly marked as spam. This way, you can always manually approve this comment in hindsight if it appeared to be sincere.
Installation
To install simply:
- Upload the ‘anti-captcha’ folder to the /wp-content/plugins/ directory
- Activate the plugin through the ‘Plugins’ menu in WordPress
FAQ
- Installation Instructions
-
To install simply:
- Upload the ‘anti-captcha’ folder to the /wp-content/plugins/ directory
- Activate the plugin through the ‘Plugins’ menu in WordPress
- Is javascript required by the user?
-
Yes, however this sounds worse then it is.
Generally, it’s frowned upon if you don’t write javascript in an unobstructive way.
The reason for this is that some visitors don’t support javascript but should still be able to get around your website.AFAIK there are four types of user-agents not supporting javascript:
- Search-engine spider bots
- Users of a command-line browser (like Lynx)
- Users who actively disabled javascript in their browser
- Mischievous bots trying to spam or hack into your blog
Obviously, search-engines don’t need to comment, register or login so they can be ruled out.
Lynx users and users with javascript disabled are likely to be a very small percentage of the internet population, who have actively excluded themselves from certain webfeatures. Finally, badly behaving bots, is what the Anti-Captcha plugin is trying to block.
Reviews
Contributors & Developers
“Anti-Captcha (anti-spam botblocker)” is open source software. The following people have contributed to this plugin.
ContributorsTranslate “Anti-Captcha (anti-spam botblocker)” into your language.
Interested in development?
Browse the code, check out the SVN repository, or subscribe to the development log by RSS.
Changelog
20141103
- Fixed a tagging mistake causing a “The plugin does not have a valid header” error for new installations
- Added a plugin icon
20140908
- Tested on WordPress version 4.0
20140129
- Fixed a bug that always marked legitimate comments to be moderated
20140128
- Fixed a bug that broke wordpress discussion settings
- Improved code compatibility
- PhantomJs headless browser detection
- Tested on WordPress version 3.8.1
20140102
- Tested on WordPress version 3.8
20130927
- Fixed a bug in which the ‘An administrator must always approve the comment’ settings was ignored
20130504
- Fixed a bug in which legitimate comments where always flagged for moderation
- Added a check on the format of the supplied mailaddress and it’s MX-records (on fail, a comment will be held for moderation instead of being approved)
20130429
- Updated anti-captcha to version 0.3 which introduces a new DOMReady loading method
- This version also prevents a ‘alreadyrunflag is not defined’ javascript error
20130421
- Tested plugin on WordPress 3.5.1 install, everything works as expected
- Linked to new blog article at http://blog.fili.nl/wordpress-anti-captcha-plugin/
- Version bump to remove WordPress ‘Out of date’ alert
20110129
- Fixed regression bug that prevented anti-captcha to work on registration and lost-password form
20110125
- Tested on WordPress version 3.0.4
- Removed anti-captcha from login procedure
20100708
- Tested on WordPress version 3.0
20100426
- Changed error message to be more descriptive
- Changed cookie mechanism to not rely on PHP sessions
- Added ‘Back/Forward Cache’ prevention
- Removed jQuery dependency
- Tested on WordPress version 2.9.2
20090821
- First release