Really, your captchas are getting unreadable. I have to refresh several times now to find something I can actually read. There are a few, simple things you can do to make it a tad easier for actual humans to use:
1: Do not use "n"s or "m"s. Especially next to each other. Within your bendy text, they can blend together with other letters, making things look like "r"s. Or can turn "in" into "m".
2: Don't use either the "i"s or the "l"s. I don't know if you noticed this, but the text can really get fragmented, and suddenly you don't know if you're looking at an "l" with a bit of it missing, or an "i" with an extra blot.
3: Never use "r"s. They have always, ALWAYS, formed with other lettes. For instance, a part of the captcha below says either "sirIn", "sinn" or "siHn". Maybe it's just that spot of invertedness that's making this harder to read, but still, it could be any of those.
---
Of course, post if any of you has a suggestion I missed (or just want to tell me I'm wrong or something). I'll probably add good suggestions to the list up here.
1: Do not use "n"s or "m"s. Especially next to each other. Within your bendy text, they can blend together with other letters, making things look like "r"s. Or can turn "in" into "m".
2: Don't use either the "i"s or the "l"s. I don't know if you noticed this, but the text can really get fragmented, and suddenly you don't know if you're looking at an "l" with a bit of it missing, or an "i" with an extra blot.
3: Never use "r"s. They have always, ALWAYS, formed with other lettes. For instance, a part of the captcha below says either "sirIn", "sinn" or "siHn". Maybe it's just that spot of invertedness that's making this harder to read, but still, it could be any of those.
---
Of course, post if any of you has a suggestion I missed (or just want to tell me I'm wrong or something). I'll probably add good suggestions to the list up here.