How about this, then. It's my (possibly incorrect) understanding that all the big LLM products still lose money per query. So you get a Web request from some bot, and on the backend, you query the corresponding LLM,…
Doubt it, a vanilla cease-and-desist letter would probably be the approach there. I doubt any large AI company would pay attention though, since, even if they're in the wrong, they can outspend almost anyone in court.
Unless they're a big company in which case they can DMCA anything they want, and they get the benefit of the doubt.
Keep in mind too, for a lot of people pushing this stuff, there's an essentially religious motivation that's more important to them than money. They truly think it's incumbent on them to build God in the form of an AI…
What if people used a kind of reverse slow-loris attack? Meaning, AI bot connects, and your site dribbles out content very slowly, just fast enough to keep the bot from timing out and disconnecting. And of course the…
[flagged]
How about this, then. It's my (possibly incorrect) understanding that all the big LLM products still lose money per query. So you get a Web request from some bot, and on the backend, you query the corresponding LLM,…
Doubt it, a vanilla cease-and-desist letter would probably be the approach there. I doubt any large AI company would pay attention though, since, even if they're in the wrong, they can outspend almost anyone in court.
Unless they're a big company in which case they can DMCA anything they want, and they get the benefit of the doubt.
Keep in mind too, for a lot of people pushing this stuff, there's an essentially religious motivation that's more important to them than money. They truly think it's incumbent on them to build God in the form of an AI…
What if people used a kind of reverse slow-loris attack? Meaning, AI bot connects, and your site dribbles out content very slowly, just fast enough to keep the bot from timing out and disconnecting. And of course the…
[flagged]