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Miguel Afonso Caetano
Miguel Afonso Caetano
@remixtures@tldr.nettime.org  ·  activity timestamp 2 days ago

Democracy? What Democracy? It's all about the old mighty cold dollar... ->

"When the World Wide Web went live in the early 1990s, its founders hoped it would be a space for anyone to share information and collaborate. But today, the free and open web is shrinking.

The Internet Archive has been recording the history of the internet and making it available to the public through its Wayback Machine since 1996. Now, some of the world’s biggest news outlets are blocking the archive’s access to their pages.

Major publishers – including The Guardian, The New York Times, the Financial Times, and USA Today – have confirmed they’re ending the Internet Archive’s access to their content.

While publishers say they support the archive’s preservation mission, they argue unrestricted access creates unintended consequences, exposing journalism to AI crawlers and members of the public trying to skirt their paywalls.

Yet, publishers don’t simply want to lock out AI crawlers. Rather, they want to sell their content to data-hungry tech companies. Their back catalogues of news, books and other media have become a hot commodity as data to train AI systems.

https://theconversation.com/news-sites-are-locking-out-the-internet-archive-to-stop-ai-crawling-is-the-open-web-closing-274968

#OpenWeb #Media #InternetArchive #News #Newspapers #Journalism

The Conversation

News sites are locking out the Internet Archive to stop AI crawling. Is the ‘open web’ closing?

News outlets want readers – and big tech – to pay for their content. But blocking the Internet Archive will leave major holes in the public record of the web.
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Drew Towler 🇵🇭
Drew Towler 🇵🇭
@drewtowler@mas.to replied  ·  activity timestamp 2 days ago

@remixtures I manage a number of sites for myself and for clients and I have always blocked the Internet Archive. My clients and I don't want outdated/superceded versions of our content to be available online. I thought this was standard practice.

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Billy Smith
Billy Smith
@BillySmith@social.coop replied  ·  activity timestamp 2 days ago

@drewtowler @remixtures

You probably don't run a technical website, as the Internet Archive was always an excellent source of old product manuals.

It also reduces your client's credibility, as we can't see where they changed from what they did in the past, to what they do now.

If it's not found in the IA, then it's more likely to be a scam website.

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