Title :
Design of a Human Interaction Proof (HIP) using human cognition in contextual natural conversation
Author :
Nayeem, Mir Tafseer ; Akand, Md Mamunur Rashid ; Sakib, Nazmus ; Ul Kabir, Md Wasi
Author_Institution :
Dept. of Comput. Sci. & Inf. Technol. (CIT), Islamic Univ. of Technol. (IUT), Gazipur, Bangladesh
Abstract :
Nowadays, many services in the internet including Email, search engine, social networking are provided with free of charge due to enormous growth of web users. With the expansion of Web services, denial of service (DoS) attacks by malicious automated programs (e.g., web bots) is becoming a serious problem of web service accounts. A HIP, or Human Interactive Proofs, is a human authentication mechanism that generates and grades tests to determine whether the user is a human or a malicious computer program. Unfortunately, the existing HIPs tried to maximize the difficulty for automated programs to pass tests by increasing distortion or noise. Consequently, it has also become difficult for potential users too. So there is a tradeoff between the usability and robustness in designing HIP tests. In our proposed technique we tried to balance the readability and security by adding contextual information in the form of natural conversation without reducing the distortion and noise. In the result section, a microscopic large-scale user study was conducted involving 110 users to investigate the actual user views compare to existing state of the art CAPTCHA systems like Google´s reCAPTCHA and Microsoft´s CAPTCHA in terms of usability and security and found our system capable of deploying largely over internet.
Keywords :
Internet; cognition; computer network security; human computer interaction; invasive software; CAPTCHA system; DoS attacks; Google reCAPTCHA; HIP test design; Internet; Microsoft CAPTCHA; Web bots; Web services; Web users; contextual information; contextual natural conversation; denial of service attacks; email; human authentication mechanism; human cognition; human interaction proof design; human user; malicious automated programs; malicious computer program; readability; search engine; security; social networking; CAPTCHAs; Computers; Electronic mail; Noise; Robustness; Security; Usability; CAPTCHA; Cognitive Psychology; Context; Conversation; HIPs; OCR; Usability; Web Services;
Conference_Titel :
Cognitive Informatics & Cognitive Computing (ICCI*CC), 2014 IEEE 13th International Conference on
Conference_Location :
London
Print_ISBN :
978-1-4799-6080-4
DOI :
10.1109/ICCI-CC.2014.6921454