I have just taken the time to thoroughly read the following article

This article has led me to the conclusion that an Open{source} War will have to be waged against LLM large language model abusers of data collection.

The work of these bots is pure DDoS denial of service. An interesting set of offensive tools have been programmed and are already implemented. They have proven to be quite effective and are being refined into sophistication to literally work to knock these networks of bots offline, in a DOT MMORPG approach.

It is unthinkable that LLM bots steal our Open Source resources servers bandwidth and financial cashflow without serious repercussions!

WTF are LLM companies thinking? Even Meta has waged war against us!

LLM has waged a brutal war.

The Open Source Community is responding; even those at The Dark Side of the internet are making tools to assist everyone against Artificial Intelligence LLM DDoS attacks, which knock whole Open Source Networks offline, as we speak.

It doesn't matter if in the end it looks like a Terminator landscape globally on the IT scale. Open source will win. LLM will disappear...

#DDoS#LLM #bots #infosec#OpenAI#Linux#KDE#GitHub#GitLab#Bash #sh #programming#AI

The composition is a screencap of a news article displayed on an Android  device. The article's headline reads, "Open source devs say AI crawlers dominate traffic, forcing blocks on entire countries." Below the headline, a subheading states, "AI bots hungry for data are taking down FOSS sites by accident, but humans are fighting back." The author's name, Benj Edwards, and the publication date, March 25, 2025, are displayed, along with the time, 6:36 PM, and the number of comments, 147.

The article's first paragraph discusses a software developer named Xe laso, who reached a breaking point when aggressive AI crawler traffic from Amazon overwhelmed their Git repository service, causing instability and downtime. Despite configuring standard defensive measures, such as adjusting robots.txt and blocking known crawler user-agents, the issue persisted.

The image accompanying the article shows a person sitting on a floral-patterned couch, working on a laptop. The person is partially submerged in water, with their legs visible above the waterline. The background includes a bookshelf with books and a potted plant, and the person is wearing a dark top and blue jeans with rolled-up cuffs. The credit for the image is given to Henrik Sorensen via Getty Images.

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馃尡 Energy used: 0.299 Wh
The composition is a screencap of a news article displayed on an Android device. The article's headline reads, "Open source devs say AI crawlers dominate traffic, forcing blocks on entire countries." Below the headline, a subheading states, "AI bots hungry for data are taking down FOSS sites by accident, but humans are fighting back." The author's name, Benj Edwards, and the publication date, March 25, 2025, are displayed, along with the time, 6:36 PM, and the number of comments, 147. The article's first paragraph discusses a software developer named Xe laso, who reached a breaking point when aggressive AI crawler traffic from Amazon overwhelmed their Git repository service, causing instability and downtime. Despite configuring standard defensive measures, such as adjusting robots.txt and blocking known crawler user-agents, the issue persisted. The image accompanying the article shows a person sitting on a floral-patterned couch, working on a laptop. The person is partially submerged in water, with their legs visible above the waterline. The background includes a bookshelf with books and a potted plant, and the person is wearing a dark top and blue jeans with rolled-up cuffs. The credit for the image is given to Henrik Sorensen via Getty Images. Ovis2-8B 馃尡 Energy used: 0.299 Wh