Wanting to profit from AI companies hunt for training data (over and above the community that created that data) is a big part of what created the context for the recent migration away from Reddit. How will the fediverse approach this problem?
By not spitting into the wind. It’s infeasible to try to prevent all web scraping from any possible IP which is what you would need to do. Reddit just took advantage of the media topic as a justification, they’re not doing anything real.
Fair, but then there’s a line between scraping through ordinary traffic and using API access to gather large data sets.
Is there? Effect is the same. Use machine learning to parse html generically and throw hardware and a pool of IPs at it. A lot more efficient than coding an API client for every service out there. It’s the same approach search engines use.
I don’t see anything being done effectively without legal protections.
Is your web site indexable by search engines?
The way that works is they make a complete copy of all the public content on the site — anything that a non-logged-in user can see — and then use that for indexing. Googlebot, BaiduSpider, Bingbot, DuckDuckBot, etc. simply copy the public data from your site onto those companies’ own servers.
Once they’ve done that, they can do anything with that data, without further interaction with your site.
That includes using it for ML/AI training.
You cannot technologically prevent that without becoming invisible to search engine indexing. That means not being public on the web.
Your choice. You can’t both be public and not public. You can’t be both indexable and not indexable.
Public federation requires being public. Which thereby requires being indexable, which thereby means everything written here can be ingested into training pipelines.
That’s simply true. It’s not good or bad; it’s just true. Your alternative is to not post your words on the public web.
Well stated thank you
iptables
.Help me to understand what this means. Something to do with blocking specific sets of ips?
Iptables is a very powerful (and complicated) firewall for Linux (and possibly other systems?). You can block on crazy amount of rules (and even more with some optional modules). Blocking specific sets of IPs is one possible solution, yes.
Seems like it would quickly become a bit of an arms race with measures and counter measures unless some legislation went into effect