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DuckDuckGo (DDG) has a feature called bangs that lets you use sequences of characters staring with ! (in this case !so) to redirect your browser to that site's search page. For example, if you type in "toys !a", it will send you to an Amazon search for toys. This is not user-specific, and a "bang", as these sequences are called is present for every user of the site.

Every time that I'm not logged in (or at least in a browser that has not been logged in since a cookie clear / in a private window) and I make a search on a Stack Exchange site via DuckDuckGo, I am presented with a CAPTCHA. This is strange, however, as if I go directly to the URL of a search, I get no such CAPTCHA.

For example, if I search on DuckDuckGo

Is there an R function for finding the index of an element in a vector? !so

I get a CAPTCHA, but if I type directly into the address bar

https://stackoverflow.com/search?q=Is+there+an+R+function+for+finding+the+index+of+an+element+in+a+vector%3F

I do not.

Watching how DDG bangs work with the following curl command, we see that it is not an HTTP redirect, but presumably JavaScript:

curl -v -A 'Mozilla/5.0 (Macintosh; Intel Mac OS X 10.15; rv:84.0) Gecko/20100101 Firefox/84.0' 'https://duckduckgo.com?q=Is%20there%20%20an%20R%20function%20for%finding%the%20index%20of%20an%20element%20in%20a%20vector \!so'

Result (relevant bit, and run in zsh):

< HTTP/2 200

It's kind of annoying that I have to fill out a CAPTCHA or log in every time I do this, even though it can be avoided by simply using the search bar on SOStack Overflow. Can something be done to prevent the CAPTCHA from being presented every time this happens?

Update

I wrongfully assumed that this was network-wide, hence why I asked meta SEMeta Stack Exchange. It appears that SOStack Overflow is much more likely to CAPTCHA me than AUAsk Ubuntu is, presumably because it's a larger target for spam and crawlers. I've also noticed that having a referrer of stackoverflow.com seems to reduce the chance of a CAPTCHA, however I've done so much searching now to test that it seems to think I'm a robot every time I do anything on SOStack Overflow, and will have to continue testing once the system forgives me.

DuckDuckGo (DDG) has a feature called bangs that lets you use sequences of characters staring with ! (in this case !so) to redirect your browser to that site's search page. For example, if you type in "toys !a", it will send you to an Amazon search for toys. This is not user-specific, and a "bang", as these sequences are called is present for every user of the site.

Every time that I'm not logged in (or at least in a browser that has not been logged in since a cookie clear / in a private window) and I make a search on a Stack Exchange site via DuckDuckGo, I am presented with a CAPTCHA. This is strange, however, as if I go directly to the URL of a search, I get no such CAPTCHA.

For example, if I search on DuckDuckGo

Is there an R function for finding the index of an element in a vector? !so

I get a CAPTCHA, but if I type directly into the address bar

https://stackoverflow.com/search?q=Is+there+an+R+function+for+finding+the+index+of+an+element+in+a+vector%3F

I do not.

Watching how DDG bangs work with the following curl command, we see that it is not an HTTP redirect, but presumably JavaScript:

curl -v -A 'Mozilla/5.0 (Macintosh; Intel Mac OS X 10.15; rv:84.0) Gecko/20100101 Firefox/84.0' 'https://duckduckgo.com?q=Is%20there%20%20an%20R%20function%20for%finding%the%20index%20of%20an%20element%20in%20a%20vector \!so'

Result (relevant bit, and run in zsh):

< HTTP/2 200

It's kind of annoying that I have to fill out a CAPTCHA or log in every time I do this, even though it can be avoided by simply using the search bar on SO. Can something be done to prevent the CAPTCHA from being presented every time this happens?

Update

I wrongfully assumed that this was network-wide, hence why I asked meta SE. It appears that SO is much more likely to CAPTCHA me than AU is, presumably because it's a larger target for spam and crawlers. I've also noticed that having a referrer of stackoverflow.com seems to reduce the chance of a CAPTCHA, however I've done so much searching now to test that it seems to think I'm a robot every time I do anything on SO, and will have to continue testing once the system forgives me.

DuckDuckGo (DDG) has a feature called bangs that lets you use sequences of characters staring with ! (in this case !so) to redirect your browser to that site's search page. For example, if you type in "toys !a", it will send you to an Amazon search for toys. This is not user-specific, and a "bang", as these sequences are called is present for every user of the site.

Every time that I'm not logged in (or at least in a browser that has not been logged in since a cookie clear / in a private window) and I make a search on a Stack Exchange site via DuckDuckGo, I am presented with a CAPTCHA. This is strange, however, as if I go directly to the URL of a search, I get no such CAPTCHA.

For example, if I search on DuckDuckGo

Is there an R function for finding the index of an element in a vector? !so

I get a CAPTCHA, but if I type directly into the address bar

https://stackoverflow.com/search?q=Is+there+an+R+function+for+finding+the+index+of+an+element+in+a+vector%3F

I do not.

Watching how DDG bangs work with the following curl command, we see that it is not an HTTP redirect, but presumably JavaScript:

curl -v -A 'Mozilla/5.0 (Macintosh; Intel Mac OS X 10.15; rv:84.0) Gecko/20100101 Firefox/84.0' 'https://duckduckgo.com?q=Is%20there%20%20an%20R%20function%20for%finding%the%20index%20of%20an%20element%20in%20a%20vector \!so'

Result (relevant bit, and run in zsh):

< HTTP/2 200

It's kind of annoying that I have to fill out a CAPTCHA or log in every time I do this, even though it can be avoided by simply using the search bar on Stack Overflow. Can something be done to prevent the CAPTCHA from being presented every time this happens?

Update

I wrongfully assumed that this was network-wide, hence why I asked Meta Stack Exchange. It appears that Stack Overflow is much more likely to CAPTCHA me than Ask Ubuntu is, presumably because it's a larger target for spam and crawlers. I've also noticed that having a referrer of stackoverflow.com seems to reduce the chance of a CAPTCHA, however I've done so much searching now to test that it seems to think I'm a robot every time I do anything on Stack Overflow, and will have to continue testing once the system forgives me.

Active reading [<https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/DuckDuckGo> <https://www.wikihow.com/Use-Than-and-Then>]. Introduced abbr. "DDG".
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Can something be done to not CAPTCHA every search from DuckDuckgo'sDuckDuckGo's bangs?

DuckDuckGo (DDG) has a feature called bangs that lets you use sequences of characters staring with ! (in this case !so) to redirect your browser to that site's search page. For example, if you type in "toys !a", it will send you to an Amazon search for toys. This is not user-specific, and a "bang", as these sequences are called is present for every user of the site.

Every time that I'm not logged in (or at least in a browser that has not been logged in since a cookie clear / in a private window) and I make a search on a Stack Exchange site via DuckDuckGo, I am presented with a CAPTCHA. This is strange, however, as if I go directly to the URL of a search, I get no such CAPTCHA.

For example, if I search on DuckDuckGo

Is there an R function for finding the index of an element in a vector? !so

I get a CAPTCHA, but if I type directly into the address bar

https://stackoverflow.com/search?q=Is+there+an+R+function+for+finding+the+index+of+an+element+in+a+vector%3F

I do not.

Watching how DDG bangs work with the following curl command, we see that it is not an HTTP redirect, but presumably JavaScript:

curl -v -A 'Mozilla/5.0 (Macintosh; Intel Mac OS X 10.15; rv:84.0) Gecko/20100101 Firefox/84.0' 'https://duckduckgo.com?q=Is%20there%20%20an%20R%20function%20for%finding%the%20index%20of%20an%20element%20in%20a%20vector \!so'

Result (relevant bit, and run in zsh):

< HTTP/2 200

It's kind of annoying that I have to fill out a CAPTCHA or log in every time I do this, even though it can be avoided by simply using the search bar on SO. Can something be done to prevent the CAPTCHA from being presented every time this happens?

Update

I wrongfully assumed that this was network-wide, hence why I asked meta SE. It appears that SO is much more likely to CAPTCHA me thenthan AU is, presumably because it's a larger target for spam and crawlers. I've also noticed that having a referrer of stackoverflow.com seems to reduce the chance of a CAPTCHA, however I've done so much searching now to test that it seems to think I'm a robot every time I do anything on SO, and will have to continue testing once the system forgives me.

Can something be done to not CAPTCHA every search from DuckDuckgo's bangs?

DuckDuckGo has a feature called bangs that lets you use sequences of characters staring with ! (in this case !so) to redirect your browser to that site's search page. For example, if you type in "toys !a", it will send you to an Amazon search for toys. This is not user-specific, and a "bang", as these sequences are called is present for every user of the site.

Every time that I'm not logged in (or at least in a browser that has not been logged in since a cookie clear / in a private window) and I make a search on a Stack Exchange site via DuckDuckGo, I am presented with a CAPTCHA. This is strange, however, as if I go directly to the URL of a search, I get no such CAPTCHA.

For example, if I search on DuckDuckGo

Is there an R function for finding the index of an element in a vector? !so

I get a CAPTCHA, but if I type directly into the address bar

https://stackoverflow.com/search?q=Is+there+an+R+function+for+finding+the+index+of+an+element+in+a+vector%3F

I do not.

Watching how DDG bangs work with the following curl command, we see that it is not an HTTP redirect, but presumably JavaScript:

curl -v -A 'Mozilla/5.0 (Macintosh; Intel Mac OS X 10.15; rv:84.0) Gecko/20100101 Firefox/84.0' 'https://duckduckgo.com?q=Is%20there%20%20an%20R%20function%20for%finding%the%20index%20of%20an%20element%20in%20a%20vector \!so'

Result (relevant bit, and run in zsh):

< HTTP/2 200

It's kind of annoying that I have to fill out a CAPTCHA or log in every time I do this, even though it can be avoided by simply using the search bar on SO. Can something be done to prevent the CAPTCHA from being presented every time this happens?

Update

I wrongfully assumed that this was network-wide, hence why I asked meta SE. It appears that SO is much more likely to CAPTCHA me then AU is, presumably because it's a larger target for spam and crawlers. I've also noticed that having a referrer of stackoverflow.com seems to reduce the chance of a CAPTCHA, however I've done so much searching now to test that it seems to think I'm a robot every time I do anything on SO, and will have to continue testing once the system forgives me.

Can something be done to not CAPTCHA every search from DuckDuckGo's bangs?

DuckDuckGo (DDG) has a feature called bangs that lets you use sequences of characters staring with ! (in this case !so) to redirect your browser to that site's search page. For example, if you type in "toys !a", it will send you to an Amazon search for toys. This is not user-specific, and a "bang", as these sequences are called is present for every user of the site.

Every time that I'm not logged in (or at least in a browser that has not been logged in since a cookie clear / in a private window) and I make a search on a Stack Exchange site via DuckDuckGo, I am presented with a CAPTCHA. This is strange, however, as if I go directly to the URL of a search, I get no such CAPTCHA.

For example, if I search on DuckDuckGo

Is there an R function for finding the index of an element in a vector? !so

I get a CAPTCHA, but if I type directly into the address bar

https://stackoverflow.com/search?q=Is+there+an+R+function+for+finding+the+index+of+an+element+in+a+vector%3F

I do not.

Watching how DDG bangs work with the following curl command, we see that it is not an HTTP redirect, but presumably JavaScript:

curl -v -A 'Mozilla/5.0 (Macintosh; Intel Mac OS X 10.15; rv:84.0) Gecko/20100101 Firefox/84.0' 'https://duckduckgo.com?q=Is%20there%20%20an%20R%20function%20for%finding%the%20index%20of%20an%20element%20in%20a%20vector \!so'

Result (relevant bit, and run in zsh):

< HTTP/2 200

It's kind of annoying that I have to fill out a CAPTCHA or log in every time I do this, even though it can be avoided by simply using the search bar on SO. Can something be done to prevent the CAPTCHA from being presented every time this happens?

Update

I wrongfully assumed that this was network-wide, hence why I asked meta SE. It appears that SO is much more likely to CAPTCHA me than AU is, presumably because it's a larger target for spam and crawlers. I've also noticed that having a referrer of stackoverflow.com seems to reduce the chance of a CAPTCHA, however I've done so much searching now to test that it seems to think I'm a robot every time I do anything on SO, and will have to continue testing once the system forgives me.

added 502 characters in body
Source Link

DuckDuckGo has a feature called bangs that lets you use sequences of characters staring with ! (in this case !so) to redirect your browser to that site's search page. For example, if you type in "toys !a", it will send you to an Amazon search for toys. This is not user-specific, and a "bang", as these sequences are called is present for every user of the site.

Every time that I'm not logged in (or at least in a browser that has not been logged in since a cookie clear / in a private window) and I make a search on a Stack Exchange site via DuckDuckGo, I am presented with a CAPTCHA. This is strange, however, as if I go directly to the URL of a search, I get no such CAPTCHA.

For example, if I search on DuckDuckGo

Is there an R function for finding the index of an element in a vector? !so

I get a CAPTCHA, but if I type directly into the address bar

https://stackoverflow.com/search?q=Is+there+an+R+function+for+finding+the+index+of+an+element+in+a+vector%3F

I do not.

Watching how DDG bangs work with the following curl command, we see that it is not an HTTP redirect, but presumably JavaScript:

curl -v -A 'Mozilla/5.0 (Macintosh; Intel Mac OS X 10.15; rv:84.0) Gecko/20100101 Firefox/84.0' 'https://duckduckgo.com?q=Is%20there%20%20an%20R%20function%20for%finding%the%20index%20of%20an%20element%20in%20a%20vector \!so'

Result (relevant bit, and run in zsh):

< HTTP/2 200

It's kind of annoying that I have to fill out a CAPTCHA or log in every time I do this, even though it can be avoided by simply using the search bar on SO. Can something be done to prevent the CAPTCHA from being presented every time this happens?

Update

I wrongfully assumed that this was network-wide, hence why I asked meta SE. It appears that SO is much more likely to CAPTCHA me then AU is, presumably because it's a larger target for spam and crawlers. I've also noticed that having a referrer of stackoverflow.com seems to reduce the chance of a CAPTCHA, however I've done so much searching now to test that it seems to think I'm a robot every time I do anything on SO, and will have to continue testing once the system forgives me.

DuckDuckGo has a feature called bangs that lets you use sequences of characters staring with ! (in this case !so) to redirect your browser to that site's search page. For example, if you type in "toys !a", it will send you to an Amazon search for toys. This is not user-specific, and a "bang", as these sequences are called is present for every user of the site.

Every time that I'm not logged in (or at least in a browser that has not been logged in since a cookie clear / in a private window) and I make a search on a Stack Exchange site via DuckDuckGo, I am presented with a CAPTCHA. This is strange, however, as if I go directly to the URL of a search, I get no such CAPTCHA.

For example, if I search on DuckDuckGo

Is there an R function for finding the index of an element in a vector? !so

I get a CAPTCHA, but if I type directly into the address bar

https://stackoverflow.com/search?q=Is+there+an+R+function+for+finding+the+index+of+an+element+in+a+vector%3F

I do not.

Watching how DDG bangs work with the following curl command, we see that it is not an HTTP redirect, but presumably JavaScript:

curl -v -A 'Mozilla/5.0 (Macintosh; Intel Mac OS X 10.15; rv:84.0) Gecko/20100101 Firefox/84.0' 'https://duckduckgo.com?q=Is%20there%20%20an%20R%20function%20for%finding%the%20index%20of%20an%20element%20in%20a%20vector \!so'

Result (relevant bit, and run in zsh):

< HTTP/2 200

It's kind of annoying that I have to fill out a CAPTCHA or log in every time I do this, even though it can be avoided by simply using the search bar on SO. Can something be done to prevent the CAPTCHA from being presented every time this happens?

DuckDuckGo has a feature called bangs that lets you use sequences of characters staring with ! (in this case !so) to redirect your browser to that site's search page. For example, if you type in "toys !a", it will send you to an Amazon search for toys. This is not user-specific, and a "bang", as these sequences are called is present for every user of the site.

Every time that I'm not logged in (or at least in a browser that has not been logged in since a cookie clear / in a private window) and I make a search on a Stack Exchange site via DuckDuckGo, I am presented with a CAPTCHA. This is strange, however, as if I go directly to the URL of a search, I get no such CAPTCHA.

For example, if I search on DuckDuckGo

Is there an R function for finding the index of an element in a vector? !so

I get a CAPTCHA, but if I type directly into the address bar

https://stackoverflow.com/search?q=Is+there+an+R+function+for+finding+the+index+of+an+element+in+a+vector%3F

I do not.

Watching how DDG bangs work with the following curl command, we see that it is not an HTTP redirect, but presumably JavaScript:

curl -v -A 'Mozilla/5.0 (Macintosh; Intel Mac OS X 10.15; rv:84.0) Gecko/20100101 Firefox/84.0' 'https://duckduckgo.com?q=Is%20there%20%20an%20R%20function%20for%finding%the%20index%20of%20an%20element%20in%20a%20vector \!so'

Result (relevant bit, and run in zsh):

< HTTP/2 200

It's kind of annoying that I have to fill out a CAPTCHA or log in every time I do this, even though it can be avoided by simply using the search bar on SO. Can something be done to prevent the CAPTCHA from being presented every time this happens?

Update

I wrongfully assumed that this was network-wide, hence why I asked meta SE. It appears that SO is much more likely to CAPTCHA me then AU is, presumably because it's a larger target for spam and crawlers. I've also noticed that having a referrer of stackoverflow.com seems to reduce the chance of a CAPTCHA, however I've done so much searching now to test that it seems to think I'm a robot every time I do anything on SO, and will have to continue testing once the system forgives me.

deleted 1 character in body
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add bang explanation
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fixed a typo
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spelling fixen. Added link to DDG bangs cause I had no idea what it was, and others may not too
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