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5 Mistakes CAPTCHA Contest Vote Buyers Make (and How to Fix Them)

Avoid the five costliest mistakes buyers make when purchasing votes for CAPTCHA-protected contests — with step-by-step fixes before your next order.

Buying votes for a CAPTCHA-protected contest is a materially different task from buying votes for an unprotected system, and the buyers who treat it the same way consistently run into the same five expensive problems. CAPTCHA protection adds latency to delivery, increases the skill requirements of the service provider, raises the cost per vote, and introduces new failure modes that do not exist in simpler contest environments. The mistakes documented in this article are not hypothetical — they are the most frequently observed errors made by buyers who come to an experienced provider after a previous CAPTCHA campaign failed. Mistake one is not disclosing the CAPTCHA type to the provider upfront, which leads to mismatched service selection and poor delivery rates. Mistake two is applying standard delivery velocity expectations to a CAPTCHA-limited system, which creates panic-buying behaviour that actually makes delivery harder. Mistakes three through five involve payment structure (paying for completion rather than delivery attempts), contingency planning, and the interpretation of delivery reports when partial completion occurs. Understanding all five before you place your next order will transform how you brief providers and evaluate their performance on CAPTCHA-protected contests. [Body to be expanded by author]