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reCAPTCHA requires a public and a private key before it can be implemented into a website. It also needs the reCAPTCHA keys depending on the website. What's the reason behind this? Does the Public and Private key affect the words displayed in the reCAPTCHA? I know that I can set the Public and Private key to be GLOBAL in which it can be used for other domains but why even need the keys in the first place?

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  • To add onto this. I have been working on implementing reCaptcha in an MVC 3 project and on the client side the control sends the value of the answer to the reCaptcha server then when my form data gets to the server side I call the reCaptcha server with a private key but nothing else to validate the request. I'm wondering if I have two people submit that form at the same time how does it know which request sent which answer? Oct 18, 2012 at 14:35

1 Answer 1

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OK. This is my guess, no guarantee.

  1. Your public key is required while generating client-side page.
  2. The client uses this public key to request from recaptcha: an image, a corresponding correct answer and perhaps an id. Of course the answer and the id comes encrypted, using the public key. (So the client cannot know the answer)
  3. User types in the answer, sends it to your server.
  4. You have: {id, answer} encrypted using public key. You send your private key and this encrypted message to recaptcha server.
  5. recaptcha unencrypts the message, revealing the answer and id, and checks if they match.
  6. it tells your server the result of the check.

Note:

  1. If the user sends a public key of his own to recaptcha, the check won't succeed since your private key does not work with his public key.
  2. The scheme proves that your server is really the one receiving the recaptcha answer.

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