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It's a very common behavior to refine answers several times after submitting them. Most of the time, the refinement is just adding and removing several characters or words. You might notice some other issues right after the edit. It's pretty common to face a CAPTCHA. The current threshold is a little unacceptable (specially for slow connections).

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    It seems a lot of people "forgot" what is the purpose of the captcha -- it is not to annoy people, but to check if the user is human. Constantly checking if user is human is an absurd -- instead of solving the problem, SE created one. Commented Nov 3, 2010 at 9:31
  • catpcha are unacceptable like they are now..
    – dynamic
    Commented Feb 28, 2011 at 21:33

4 Answers 4

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Some reductions in CAPTCHA throttle thresholds, if you have > 10k rep:

  • for edits -- reduced by two-thirds
  • for post submission times -- min seconds reduced by one half, max minutes increased by 2x

additionally: assuming you are a logged in user and have >= 200 reputation, after successfully completing one captcha we now suppress captcha for 5 minutes on your account.

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  • It's alright for some, you have more than 10k rep. Situation for the rest of us is dire. Stack Overflow admins are out of touch as to what this site is like to use for the majority of users. Commented Aug 7, 2012 at 23:13
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    why is this problematic? Complete one and you don't have to complete another for 5 minutes minumum. Can you describe what you are doing in more detail? Commented Aug 9, 2012 at 0:01
  • I see Recaptchas after making several edits to an answer in quick succession or posting on a new Stack Exchange site. But the rate doesn't bother me so much as the difficulty meta.stackexchange.com/questions/75965/… Commented Aug 9, 2012 at 8:38
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    You don't consider a captcha as frequently as every 5 minutes tedious? Try it for a while...
    – Basic
    Commented Aug 30, 2012 at 11:23
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I have several possible solutions:

  1. Take the edit magnitude (the number of characters edited) into account. Don't ask for a captcha for a number of small edits.
  2. Just increase the threshold.
  3. Take the rep into account. Either use a step-function to reduce captchas after a specific rep or decrease captcha count as the rep goes high. However, if you chose this route, you should make sure there's a maximum limit so that if a high-rep account is hijacked, not much harm can be done.
  4. Remove that stupid image. It's a pain to wait for it to load on slow and high latency connections like mine.
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Just as another example of why this is sometimes required: in cases where the preview doesn't quite match the posted version (e.g. for links or code formatting) it can be a bit of a trial-and-error process. CAPTCHA makes it that bit more tedious.

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  • That's a good point. Sometimes the preview pane gets it wrong and it takes you a few goes to find what the issue is.
    – cletus
    Commented Jul 3, 2009 at 15:41
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The limits should be much more relaxed, especially if the captcha has been recently hit. Currently it is extremely annoying. And relaxed limits at 10k rep, WTF is that? How about making them relaxed at 1k or so - high enough to discourage most spammers from building it up, I suppose...

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