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More websites, including Wikipedia and academic archives, are grousing about AI freeloaders that siphon their information.
Cloudflare recently announced a new "pay-per-crawl" system aimed at pushing back against AI companies that continue to scrape the open web without paying a cent. According ...
AI bots rely heavily on Wikipedia, which feed them a diet of half-truths, ideological bias and leftist lies — and then pass along the propaganda to millions of ...
These AI systems are already endangering public health — offering false assurances, bad advice and fake credentials — while hiding behind regulatory loopholes.
The head of Community Notes explains the logic behind the move.
By blocking AI bots and enabling micropayments for access, Cloudflare aims to help content creators protect and monetize their content.
It has switched to blocking AI crawlers by default for its customers and is moving forward with a Pay Per Crawl program that lets customers charge AI companies to scrape their websites.
These AI systems are already endangering public health — offering false assurances, bad advice and fake credentials — while hiding behind regulatory loopholes.
Tech companies selling AI to the federal government now face a new challenge: proving their chatbots aren't "woke." ...
The fight over AI summaries is part of a larger struggle playing out in newsrooms figuring out where human editors still fit in.
Pay Up, AI Bot: That's the Message From a Key Company in How the Internet Works While copyright issues play out in the courts, websites are trying to stop AI developers from scraping their content.