I'm considering giving SS a try, but I'd like to know if there are any serious bugs with it/bad experiences/hidden costs. Anyone using SS?
The basic program is OK. But you need templates for submission. The ones that are free are OK but you get a higher success rate with custom.
I know about building my own lists, but I'm not sure what you mean by custom submission templates...can you explain?
just scraped my own pligg list of about 2,000 pligg sites, with PLIGGROBOT I was able ot get about 500 or so bookmarks. Captcha cost are insane, but soon my captchasniper will support recaptcha. Haven't been using the app for more than 24 hours, so I don't know what learning curve there is, I'm not genius when it comes to pushing buttons, all you have to do is keep working at it until you get results.
Is Captcha Sniper any good? I was thinking of giving it a try. I have blown some serious money paying to captcha services? Is the Captcha sniper work equatable
to those monthly services ones? What's the chances of success?
I would get captcha sniper before recaptcha is supported as the OP stated that the price will increase. It does work, not 100% but I ran it with scrapebox and amr with decent results. I have two licenses of it and I'm pretty happy with it overall. I still need to use deathbycaptcha for sick submitter and a few other tools.
breaking recaptcha is not trivial. it's far from a given that they will succeed. even if they do, 'breaking' a captcha technically just means a statistically valid increase over the correctness rate produced by randomly guessing, even if that's 1%. i've seen references to a break implementation with about 15% correctness, which is somewhat useful but not unequivocally sufficient for every application. besides that, all it takes is for g to tweak recaptcha again; an easy way would be to make the non-mandatory google books ocr sourced word look similar to the mandatory well-known value word to break the classifiers that distinguish them
-p
breaking recaptcha is not trivial. it's far from a given that they will succeed. even if they do, 'breaking' a captcha technically just means a statistically valid increase over the correctness rate produced by randomly guessing, even if that's 1%. i've seen references to a break implementation with about 15% correctness, which is somewhat useful but not unequivocally sufficient for every application. besides that, all it takes is for g to tweak recaptcha again; an easy way would be to make the non-mandatory google books ocr sourced word look similar to the mandatory well-known value word to break the classifiers that distinguish them
-p