It's like a fun little puzzle everytime I post
>>523905150Floating in the warm, dark water, the world beyond the tank disappeared. No sound, no light—just the gentle buoyancy cradling every curve of the body. The bass from the hidden subwoofer began to vibrate through the water, low and rolling, like the pulse of the universe itself.A sudden tickle on the feet made the body jerk involuntarily, laughter rising unbidden, spreading in shivers from toes to chest. Then, a sneeze built, sharp and insistent. When it erupted, it rippled through every muscle, a shockwave of relief that traveled head to toe.And then, the orgasm hit—both natural and electric, amplified by deep brain stimulation—its waves colliding with the sneeze, intertwining in a strange, fractal rhythm. THC and psilocybin stretched the perception of each sensation, turning seconds into infinity. Colors unseen, patterns unnamable, and feelings unmeasurable began to lace themselves over the body’s every nerve.DMT wove through the cortex, opening doors the mind had never known existed. Time fractured. The body no longer belonged to itself—it was a vessel for waves of pleasure, vibration, and light. Every pulse of the bass, every contraction of muscle, every shiver of ticklish laughter resonated across the whole being, magnified by the sensory void.Boundaries melted. The room, the tank, the self—everything became one. The sneeze, the orgasm, the tickle, the vibration, the chemical symphony—they were no longer separate. They were a single, infinite loop of sensation, each wave feeding into the next, until the body felt like it might dissolve into the very rhythm of existence itself.And then it stopped. Not abruptly, but like the last echo of a chord fading into silence. The body floated, trembling, breathless, suspended in a strange, perfect stillness. Nothing remained but a soft, lingering hum—the memory of pleasure, infinite and fractal, imprinted on every nerve.
>>523905150It’s too easy.
>>523905221Agreed. Harder puzzles means more fun and keeps the third worlders out. It's a win win.
>>523905150It’s too easy, so naturally it will be taken away.
Captcha is meant to keep bots out
>>523906074CAPTCHAs aren’t really keeping bots out anymore. They were designed to be easy for humans but hard for computers—like reading distorted text or picking certain images. But modern AI can do those tasks just as well as humans, and often faster and more accurately.Text CAPTCHAs? AI can read squiggly letters almost perfectly.Image CAPTCHAs? AI can instantly pick all the correct squares.Behavioral CAPTCHAs? AI can mimic human mouse movements or timing.Basically, AI can solve CAPTCHAs at scale, while humans are still slow and sometimes make mistakes. That means CAPTCHAs no longer reliably tell humans and bots apart.
>>523905220i hope you didn’t type that out cuz im not reading any of it
>>523906197It would be funny if CAPTCHAs started looking for bots who are too good at solving them. Traditional computers are inherently bad at adding randomness so maybe something could be done in that aspect
>>523906310Exactly! That’s actually an idea some researchers have explored—trying to detect “superhuman” behavior. If a user solves CAPTCHAs too quickly or too perfectly, it can be a red flag. The tricky part is introducing unpredictability that AI can’t just calculate. Humans are naturally a little random, but computers tend to follow patterns, so in theory, CAPTCHAs could start measuring subtle randomness in timing or clicks instead of just whether you pick the right images.
>>523906393so then if you are listening to music and clic your mouse with the beat of the song it will detect you are following a pattern and call you a bot. and what a rare use case since as we know barely any humans listen to music
>>523905220Sir, this is a Wendy's.
>>523905150I like them because you don't need to type, it's all just done with the mouse.