Ask HN: Why hasn't Google monetized ReCAPTCHA with ads?
5 ATechGuy 6 9/5/2025, 5:19:05 PM
ReCAPTCHA is used on millions of websites to verify human users. Given the massive scale and visibility of these widgets, it looks like a potential goldmine for impressions. Yet, Google has never added ads to it.
Considering their focus on ad revenue, this seems like a missed opportunity, or maybe a deliberate decision.
Was it an ethical choice, a UX concern, or a legal limitation? Or is it that the data collected through ReCAPTCHA is already more valuable than showing ads?
Curious to hear your thoughts.
There is also the reputation risk that advertisers and their brands might become associated with the stress points of having to do a CAPTCHA or being denied access etc.
Just two off the top of my head.
Note that in a lot of cases it looks at your cookies and other trackers and decide you must be human by looking at the mud on your boots from walking all around the web. It might also play a valuable role in punishing people who use browsers other than Chrome, though it seems the browsers that I have the most CAPTCHA harassment with are on Android tablets.
[1] unless you completely believe the "all clicks are click fraud" theory that nobody has honestly clicked ads since 1999. It's up there with my other conspiracy theories such as "the dead internet theory" and the one that there's no interest in mainstream culture at all outside of the media: that is, I meet people who watch things like Solo Leveling and play Genshin Impact but never people who watch Severance and play Call of Duty