“You’re still on that screen?”
“It won’t let me in until I identify the fire hydrants.”
“There aren’t any fire hydrants in that picture, Sari. Those are mailboxes.”
“The computer thinks they’re fire hydrants. If I argue with it, I’ll be here until Monday.”
– Overheard in Bekasi
Sari is sitting on her couch in Bekasi. It is a Sunday evening, the kind of humid, heavy night where the air feels like a damp wool blanket. She has exactly fifteen minutes of mental energy left before her eyes refuse to stay open, and she wants to spend ten of them on a bit of entertainment. She types her password. The keyboard on her phone, sensing her haste, decides to lag. She hits a ‘p’ instead of an ‘o’. Backspace. Backspace.
The screen refreshes. Now, it wants a code. The code is sent via SMS. She waits. The signal bar on her phone flickers between two and three bars of 4G. The notification finally slides down from the top, but when she taps it, the login screen resets because the app didn’t like being put in the background. She starts over. This is the fourth time.
By the time she reaches the captcha-the blurry grid of Indonesian streets where she must find the “motorcycles”-her heart rate has climbed. She isn’t relaxed. She is being tested.
