This makes me feel motion-sick, which is kind of impressive because I'm normally not easily susceptible to that.
dylan604 2 hours ago [-]
My eyes went straight into seeing 3D image mode. It's the easiest one I've seen yet! /s
RedShift1 1 hours ago [-]
Heh my eyes felt like they started bleeding
dylan604 2 hours ago [-]
Has anyone tried a long exposure to see if the motion smears into something discernible? Obviously harder to expose a bright screen without some ND since the shutter speed is the phone's main exposure control
If you zoom out to 25 % the text is clearly visible and screenshottable.
dasil003 1 hours ago [-]
How do you take a “long exposure” screenshot? Isn’t every screenshot a perfect digital copy of a single frame or a full on video?
dylan604 1 hours ago [-]
Clearly, I meant using a camera, and I'm guessing you knew that too
dice 43 minutes ago [-]
Not the parent but that was not at all clear to me. I immediately thought of taking multiple successive instantaneous screenshots and then stacking them. I'm not sure I would have thought of using a camera within a few minutes to an hour, it's not a tool I would ever reach for normally.
catlifeonmars 15 minutes ago [-]
I just did this with 50% transparency. It works
vivegi 36 minutes ago [-]
Cool. I used the Windows snipping tool and just screen-recorded it.
Another idea I had with this concept is to make an LLM-proof captcha. Maybe humans can detect the characters in the 'motion' itself, which could be unique to us?
- The captcha would be generated like this on a headless browser, and recorded as a video, which is then served to the user.
- We can make the background also move in random directions, to prevent just detecting which pixels are changing and drawing an outline.
- I tried also having the text itself move (bounce like the DVD logo). Somehow makes it even more readable.
I definitely know nothing about how LLMs interpret video, or optics, so please let me know if this is dumb.
2 hours ago [-]
squigz 2 hours ago [-]
As if captchas aren't painful enough for visually impaired users...
bix6 3 hours ago [-]
Ha cool! How’s it work?
Lalabadie 3 hours ago [-]
The only way to see the text is in the movement. The pattern across any single frame is entirely random noise.
altcognito 3 hours ago [-]
Fun side effect: staring at the letters for a bit makes the rest of the image move.
alliancedamages 2 hours ago [-]
You can also break it by recording the screen, of course.
cryptoz 3 hours ago [-]
Had a lot of fun trying to break this. Turns out you can screenshot real easily by zooming out. Maybe there are other ways but I stopped trying :)
vunderba 2 hours ago [-]
yeah - I actually was initially confused since I wasn't having any issues screenshotting it but had forgotten that I have the default site zoom set to ~65%.
sans_souse 3 hours ago [-]
Not sure what you mean - I can screenshot it freely that's not the point the point is if you look then at the screenshot you cant discern the text because its a single frame now
This is on MacOS 15.6, Chromium (BrowserOS), captured with the OS' native screenshot utility. Since I was asked about the zoom factor, I now tried simply capturing it at 100% and it was still perfectly readable...
I guess the trick doesn't work on this browser.
dylan604 2 hours ago [-]
I zoomed out to 90% and could make out something was there but wasn't easy to read. Zooming out further went back to just being noise. I also tried zooming in but with no success. What zoom level did you use and I guess we have to ask the standard what browser/version/OS/etc?? My FFv142 on macOS never took a screen grab like you did
dwg 3 hours ago [-]
Zooming out before taking screenshot and the text is no longer obfuscated. I tried and confirmed it works. In fact, the text is perhaps even more readable than the original.
anigbrowl 3 hours ago [-]
It depends how fast or slow your GPU is. I tried it and saw the effect you described, but within a second or two it started moving and was obscured again. Obviously you could automate the problem away.
dylan604 2 hours ago [-]
Mine freezes the animation on zoom change. Not sure you could automate against that
kps 2 hours ago [-]
The text reappears when I screenshot it twice.
UltraSane 2 hours ago [-]
Seems trivial to diff multiple screenshots to identify what parts move. Or just use a compression algorithm to do the same.
dazzlevolta 4 minutes ago [-]
Would 2 screenshots be enough, I wonder?
boothby 1 minutes ago [-]
Yeah, the letters are big enough, an xor shows the text quite clearly.
hbbio 8 minutes ago [-]
Coinbase was hacked for $400M when literally someone from outsourced support services was taking screenshots on their phone!
The culprit had more than 10k photos of all security details for thousands of wealthy customers.
On iPhone: screenrecord. Take screenshots every couple seconds. Overlay images with 50% transparency (I use Procreate Pocket for this part)
They even provide the source code for the effect:
https://github.com/brantagames/noise-shader
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Bg3RAI8uyVw
The effect is disrupted by introducing rendering artifacts, by watching the video in 144p or in this case by zooming out.
I'd love to know the name of this effect, so I can read more about the fMRI studies that make use of it.
What I've found so far:
Random Dot Kinematogram
Perceptual Organization from Motion (video of Flounder camouflage)
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=2VO10eDIyiE
- The captcha would be generated like this on a headless browser, and recorded as a video, which is then served to the user.
- We can make the background also move in random directions, to prevent just detecting which pixels are changing and drawing an outline.
- I tried also having the text itself move (bounce like the DVD logo). Somehow makes it even more readable.
I definitely know nothing about how LLMs interpret video, or optics, so please let me know if this is dumb.
This is on MacOS 15.6, Chromium (BrowserOS), captured with the OS' native screenshot utility. Since I was asked about the zoom factor, I now tried simply capturing it at 100% and it was still perfectly readable...
I guess the trick doesn't work on this browser.
The culprit had more than 10k photos of all security details for thousands of wealthy customers.