← Back to context

Comment by aspenmayer

11 days ago

I mean, I wouldn't care who referred the paying user. I would optimize my blog to serve free and paying users to the best of my ability. I would hope that I could do that but I don't know what you are trying to do with your blog. Most blogs could probably be self-hosted with some caching and static layout where possible to perhaps avoid needing to use Cloudflare. I guess you already have to be using CF to have access to these paying AI crawlers.

Do you think that there is $25 of value in the creation of your blog, to say nothing of value that AI may be able to extract from it? (I'm speaking hypothetically, as I haven't looked at your profile to see if you link your blog, but I will do so now.)

Edit: I have checked, and I've read your blog before. I think the answer to the question depends on who is asking but I don't know how you feel about the matter. I think asking for folks to pay for free things is a different value proposition than a pay-per-use fee, so the economics are different. You're also offering something different when you give away a blog and monetize access to a community or something similar, which is different still to accepting donations and so on. I don't know what you do for work or if you do your blog full time, but I think it's cool that you make it all the same.

> Do you think that there is $25 of value in the creation of your blog, to say nothing of value that AI may be able to extract from it?

I think the more pertinent question is: Can an AI company determine the value of that content automatically without seeing it? Because if they can’t, why would they pay for it?

  • If they have lots of reasons to believe it could be relevant due to requests for content by name or reference, as well as citations and other knowledge graph links, I think they could run some kind of A/B test to see what the market will bear based on what they estimate the crawls per billing period would be.

  • If they won't pay for it, they can also kindly fuck off and not crawl my blog. Both are fine outcomes for me.

I pay $300/year for the privilege of being able to write what I want without the pressure to monetize or surveil my readers.

Some of my blog posts are linked by programming language docs for cryptography. Others have helped queer folks transition to a higher-paying tech career.

It's difficult to quantify either of those things in a dollar value. I've opted to not ever do so. But if I can make the AI slop machines pay to view my furry/tech ramblings, I will do enthusiastically.