▲ | bbarnett 2 days ago | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
It's a very simple metric. They had nothing of value, no product, no marketable thing. Then they scanned your site. They had to, along with others. And in scanning your site, they scanned the results of your work, effort, and cost. Now they have a product. I need to be clear here, if that site has no value, why do they want it? Understand, these aren't private citizens. A private citizen might print out a recipe, who cares? They might even share that with friends. OK. But if they take it, then package it, then make money? That is different. In my country, copyright doesn't really punish a person. No one gets hit for copying movies even. It does punish someone, for example, copying and then reselling that work though. This sort of thing should depend on who's doing it. Their motive. When search engines were operating an index, nothing was lost. In fact, it was a mutually symbiotic relationship. I guess what we should really ask, is why on Earth should anyone produce anything, if the end result is not one sees it? And instead, they just read a summary from an AI? No more website, no new data, means no new AI knowledge too. | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
▲ | horsawlarway 2 days ago | parent | next [-] | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
I guess I don't derive my personal value from the esteem of others. And I don't mean that as an insult, because I get that different people do things for different reasons, and we all get our dopamine hits in different ways. I just think that if the only reason you choose to do something is because you think it's going to get attention on the internet... Then you probably shouldn't be doing that thing in the first place. I produce things because I enjoy producing them. I share them with my friends and family (both in person and online). That's plenty. Historically... that's the norm. > I guess what we should really ask, is why on Earth should anyone produce anything, if the end result is not one sees it? This is a really rather disturbing view of the world. Do things for you. I make things because I see it. My family sees it. My friends see it. I grow roses for me and my neighbors - not for some random internet credit. I plant trees so my kids can sit under them - not for some random internet credit. | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
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▲ | shkkmo 2 days ago | parent | prev [-] | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
> But if they take it, then package it, then make money? That is different But still, also legal. You can't copyright a recipe itself, just the fluff around it. It is totally legal for somone to visit a bunch of recipe blogs, copy the recipes, rewrite the descriptions and detailed instructions and then publish that in a book. The is essentially the same as what LLMs do. So prohibiting this would be a dramatic expansion of the power of copyright. Personally, I don't use LLMs. I hope there will always be people like me that want to see the original source and verify any knowledge. I'm actually hopeful that LLM reduction in search traffic will impact the profitability of SEO clickbait referral link garbage sites that now dominate results on many searches. We'll be left with enthusiasts producing content for the joy of nerding out again. Those sites will still have a following of actually interested people and the rest can consume the soulless summaries from the eventually ad infested LLMs. | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
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