It seems like there's a new reason to be frustrated at AI almost every day, a reason that bubbles up through the primordial soup of festering unconsciousness and into the light of anger. There's the effect on the economy, job thievery, copyrighted content thievery, and the simple fact that it's just not right that lifeless neural networks should be able to convince anyone they're conscious. And now, there's another reason to be mad at the ethereal AI buggers: they're clogging up server bandwidth without permission.
Yes, I was aware that some companies scrape websites for content to train their AI models, and yes, I was aware that they sometimes do this without a website's permission. But I didn't consider the impact this might have on the servers running these websites. CEO of iFixit, Kyle Wiens, is here to let all of us know that this does, in fact, occur, as they ask AI company Anthropic: «Do you really need to hit our servers a million times in 24 hours?»
Assuming Wiens isn't massively exaggerating, it's no surprise that this is «typing up our devops resources.» A million «hits» per day would do it, and would certainly be enough to justify more than a little annoyance.
The thing is, putting this bandwidth chugging in context only makes it more ridiculous, which is what Wiens is getting at. It's not just that an AI company is seemingly clogging up server resources, but that it's been expressly forbidden from using the content on its servers anyway.
There should be no reason for an AI company to hit the iFixit site because its terms of service state that «copying or distributing any Content, materials or design elements on the Site for any other purpose, including training a machine learning or AI model, is strictly prohibited without the express prior written permission of iFixit.» Unless it wants us to believe it's not going to use any data it scrapes for these purposes, and it's just doing it for… fun?
Hey @AnthropicAI: I get you're hungry for data. Claude is
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