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Taxis are easy to identify - cars with a (usually lit) topper and writing all over them are taxis, the writing doesn't even have to be in a language you understand to be identifiable as a taxi - you don't need to actually be able to read the writing. Other marks like checkered patterns are common, taxis are designed to stand out.

New York City also has green taxis, so it's not anywhere-centric thing.

2FA requires you to be a registered user. That's a whole new level of user friction.
> a relatively simple puzzle

I'm curious where the line on "relatively simple" is.

Other people have already noted the tasks can be confusing if you're not an American English-speaker, and that the backup tasks for people with vision difficulties are nigh impossible.

But beyond that: some of the time I have to do 1-3 Captcha pages, which I would class as relatively simple. Other times, I've gotten up to 10+ pages with what I believe was perfect accuracy. (They were fairly simple tasks like "click the stoplights", not the sometimes-ambiguous ones like "click the storefronts".) That's usually when I'm traveling, so it's correlated with slow internet. I don't know what the upper limit is, because there are very few pages I care about enough to push through 10+ rounds of Captcha, but I'd argue that "spending 3 minutes studying traffic photos with no end in sight" is way past my definition of 'simple'.

Not to mention, you're basically providing free mechanical turk style work for google. Back when it started with digitizing books, alright sure thats helping an open initiative to do something good. When I have to click cars and trees and traffic lights in order to post a comment, Google, is having me do work for them, and I'd rather not work for them, even if its only a few seconds at a time here or there.
just tested on firefox (android). no issue.

i didn't test opera nor brave, but neither should have any issues either, as they're just chrome forks at this point.

This consistently confuses me and the answer seems to vary between cases.
You understand that Google isn't the only search engine ... right?