Comment by zaptrem
2 days ago
If people are truly concerned about the crawlers hammering their 128mb raspberry pi website then a better solution would be to provide an alternative way for scrapers to access the data (e.g., voluntarily contribute a copy of their public site to something like common crawl).
If Anubis blocked crawler requests but helpfully redirected to a giant tar ball of every site using their service (with deltas or something to reduce bandwidth) I bet nobody would bother actually spending the time to automate cracking it since it’s basically negative value. You could even make it a torrent so most of the be costs are paid by random large labs/universities.
I think the real reason most are so obsessed with blocking crawlers is they want “their cut”… an imagined huge check from OpenAI for their fan fiction/technical reports/whatever.
No, this doesn’t work. Many of the affected sites have these but they’re ignored. We’re talking about git forges, arguably the most standardised tool in the industry, where instead of just fetching the repository every single history revision of every single file gets recursively hammered to death. The people spending the VC cash to make the internet unusable right now don’t know how to program. They especially don’t give a shit about being respectful. They just hammer all the sites, all the time, forever.
I'm generally very pro-robot (every web UA is a robot really IMO) but these scrapers are exceptionally poorly written and abusive.
Plenty of organizations managed to crawl the web for decades without knocking things over. There's no reason to behave this way.
It's not clear to me why they've continued to run them like this. It seems so childish and ignorant.
The bad scrapers would get blocked by the wall I mentioned. The ones intelligent enough to break the wall would simply take the easier way out and download the alternative data source.
The kind of crawlers/scrapers who DDoS a site like this aren't going to bother checking common crawl or tarballs. You vastly overestimate the intelligence and prosociality of what bursty crawler requests tend to look like. (Anyone who is smart or prosocial will set up their crawler to not overwhelm a site with requests in the first place - yet any site with any kind of popularity gets flooded with these requests sooner or later)
If they don’t have the intelligence to go after the more efficient data collection method then they likely won’t have the intelligence or willpower to work around the second part I mentioned (keeping something like Anubis). The only problem is when you put Anubis in the way of determined, intelligent crawlers without giving them a choice that doesn’t involve breaking Anubis.
> I think the real reason most are so obsessed with blocking crawlers is they want “their cut”…
I find that an unfair view of the situation. Sure, there are examples such as StackOverflow (which is ridiculous enough as they didn't make the content) but the typical use case I've seen on the small scale is "I want to self-host my git repos because M$ has ruined GitHub, but some VC-funded assholes are drowning the server in requests".
They could just clone the git repo, and then pull every n hours, but it requires specialized code so they won't. Why would they? There's no money in maintaining that. And that's true for any positive measure you may imagine until these companies are fined for destroying the commons.
There's a lot of people that really don't like AI, and simply don't want their data used for it.
While that’s a reasonable opinion to have, it’s a fight they can’t really win. It’s like putting up a poster in a public square then running up to random people and shouting “no, this poster isn’t for you because I don’t like you, no looking!” Except the person they’re blocking is an unstoppable mega corporation that’s not even morally in the wrong imo (except for when they overburden people’s sites, that’s bad ofc)
The looking is fine, the photographing and selling the photo less so… and fyi in denmark monuments have copyright so if you photograph and sell the photos you owe fees :)