Xorte logo

News Markets Groups

USA | Europe | Asia | World| Stocks | Commodities



Add a new RSS channel

 
 


Keywords

2024-07-27 15:30:22| Engadget

Freelancer has accused Anthropic, the AI startup behind the Claude large language models, of ignoring its "do not crawl" robots.txt protocol to scrape its websites' data. Meanwhile, iFixit CEO Kyle Wiens said Anthropic has ignored the website's policy prohibiting the use of its content for AI model training. Matt Barrie, the chief executive of Freelancer, told The Information that Anthropic's ClaudeBot is "the most aggressive scraper by far." His website allegedly got 3.5 million visits from the company's crawler within a span of four hours, which is "probably about five times the volume of the number two" AI crawler. Similarly, Wiens posted on X/Twitter that Anthropic's bot hit iFixit's servers a million times in 24 hours. "You're not only taking our content without paying, you're tying up our devops resources," he wrote.  Back in June, Wired accused another AI company, Perplexity, of crawling its website despite the presence of the Robots Exclusion Protocol, or robots.txt. A robots.txt file typically contains instructions for web crawlers on which pages they can and can't access. While compliance is voluntary, it's mostly just been ignored by bad bots. After Wired's piece came out, a startup called TollBit that connects AI firms with content publishers reported that it's not just Perplexity that's bypassing robots.txt signals. While it didn't name names, Business Insider said it learned that OpenAI and Anthropic were ignoring the protocol, as well.  Barrie said Freelancer tried to refuse the bot's access requests at first, but it ultimately had to block Anthropic's crawler entirely. "This is egregious scraping [which] makes the site slower for everyone operating on it and ultimately affects our revenue," he added. As for iFixit, Wiens said the website has set alarms for high traffic, and his people got woken up at 3AM due to Anthropic's activities. The company's crawler stopped scraping iFixit after it added a line in its robots.txt file that disallows Anthropic's bot, in particular.  The AI startup told The Information that it respects robots.txt and that its crawler "respected that signal when iFixit implemented it." It also said that it aims "for minimal disruption by being thoughtful about how quickly [it crawls] the same domains," which is why it's now investigating the case.  AI firms use crawlers to collect content from websites that they can use to train their generative AI technologies. They've been the target of multiple lawsuits as a result, with publishers accusing them of copyright infringement. To prevent more lawsuits from being filed, companies like OpenAI have been striking deals with publishers and websites. OpenAI's content partners, so far, include News Corp, Vox Media, the Financial Times and Reddit. iFixit's Wiens seems open to the idea of signing a deal for the how-to-repair's website's articles, as well, telling Anthropic in a tweet he's willing to have a conversation about licensing content for commercial use. If any of those requests accessed our terms of service, they would have told you that use of our content expressly forbidden. But don't ask me, ask Claude!If you want to have a conversation about licensing our content for commercial use, we're right here. pic.twitter.com/CAkOQDnLjD Kyle Wiens (@kwiens) July 24, 2024 This article originally appeared on Engadget at https://www.engadget.com/websites-accuse-ai-startup-anthropic-of-bypassing-their-anti-scraping-rules-and-protocol-133022756.html?src=rss


Category: Marketing and Advertising

 

Latest from this category

07.09Theres a Stranger Things Polly Pocket set, and its design is really clever
07.09Over 1.4 million Ram 1500 trucks recalled to fix a bug in the anti-lock brake system
07.09Meta shares how WhatsApp and Messenger will interact with other messaging apps in the EU
07.09How to use a VPN on Roku
07.09Boeing's Starliner is back without the astronauts it flew to the ISS
07.09An Apple Store in Oklahoma City is close to approving an union agreement for its workers
06.09YouTubers built a six foot tall working replica of Apples iPhone 15 Pro Max
06.09YouTube terminates five right-wing channels linked to the DOJs Russia indictments
Marketing and Advertising »

All news

08.09Today's Headlines
08.09Chinese giant Chery could build cars in UK
07.09Theres a Stranger Things Polly Pocket set, and its design is really clever
07.09Over 1.4 million Ram 1500 trucks recalled to fix a bug in the anti-lock brake system
07.09Contaminated eggs sold in Illinois recalled after causing Salmonella infections
07.09Meta shares how WhatsApp and Messenger will interact with other messaging apps in the EU
07.09Body Shop's remaining stores rescued from administration
07.09How to use a VPN on Roku
More »
Privacy policy . Copyright . Contact form .