It really seems like people cancelling their subs is just a net negative to Ars as a whole for something they have no control over. I know people think you guys should be all torches and pitchforks about it and pushing back as a group. But realistically I think we all it would accomplish nothing.Just to keep making this part clear: nobody is making any money off of comments. We are not selling them to OpenAI. Ken has specifically stated this.
This is my understanding based on our article and Ken's comments and no insider knowledge:
The issue is the deal between Condé and Open AI removed our block on scraping Ars which was in our robots.txt file. Which means it does technically open up scraping the forum since that's under our main URL. I don't think we are aware they are, or even care, but they could. We don't see any money for it.
We are attempting to block the forum from scraping in our robots.txt file (/civis/ which is the path to all forum comments), but we have to get permission to do so since it's technically part of a larger deal, and can't just unilaterally do it.
That's my understanding at least, I don't want to comment overmuch on a deal I have not been a part of. This is all about as much transparency as I can do.
Money is the only thing the people calling the shots understand.It really seems like people cancelling their subs is just a net negative to Ars as a whole for something they have no control over. I know people think you guys should be all torches and pitchforks about it and pushing back as a group. But realistically I think we all it would accomplish nothing.
Cancelling subs will just potentially cause some lost jobs, which is the opposite of what we all should want to achieve given the mass consolidation of journalism as a whole the last few decades.
It unequivocally SUCKS that at a minimum you guys are not getting a portion of the money from this deal for your work. I mean really how many people are going to ask ChatGPT to link them to the latest ARS article, but people probably will ask it questions that will be based on work you made and you will get 0 new eyes on your real work. That's fucked and CN CEO deserves a kick to the balls.
I haven't ever subbed and have been having minor financial issues lately but have been thinking about it. I donate money every month to TechDirt already and I feel after all this that when the time is right in the near future I will finally sub. We should be fighting to make sure you all still get to do your job and be able to make a living.
It's not, to be honest. Our biggest and best argument is that we're opposed to it, they don't need it, and it stifles participation. A bunch of people canceling subs and then still hanging out here ultimately has the opposite effect as intended.
I hope people can trust that we're making the best case we can.
Ars comments have no monetary value to anyone else, as Ken said we are not selling them, or getting paid for them.
But to us, Ars Technica? They have tremendous value, in the sense of community, emotionally, and the continuity. We're one of the oldest continuous communities on the internet. You can go back and read stories from over 20 years ago from members who are still here posting regularly.
We have stories that are almost-myth like in their status, like the person who swallowed the 7 key from their keyboard, or Fugly the pet octopus. This is our history, and it's important.
You can even find it referenced outside of Ars. Here's a reddit post that reposts the Fugly story (top comment):
View: https://www.reddit.com/r/todayilearned/comments/32re7s/til_there_was_an_octopus_in_an_aquarium_that/
You can find it by searching on Google too, because the forum has always been indexed by search engines. It's always been public.
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Hahahaha you think they care...I have an idea: Create a second copy of all the forums and mark the old ones as readable by logged in users only. Then only use the new ones going forward.
At least then we have a choice over how our content is used.
That would be fantastic.The company determines what goes in our robots.txt. That said, I am asking if we can do exactly that: block /civis/.
Just to keep making this part clear: nobody is making any money off of comments. We are not selling them to OpenAI. Ken has specifically stated this.
This is my understanding based on our article and Ken's comments and no insider knowledge:
The issue is the deal between Condé and Open AI removed our block on scraping Ars which was in our robots.txt file. Which means it does technically open up scraping the forum since that's under our main URL. I don't think we are aware they are, or even care, but they could. We don't see any money for it.
We are attempting to block the forum from scraping in our robots.txt file (/civis/ which is the path to all forum comments), but we have to get permission to do so since it's technically part of a larger deal, and can't just unilaterally do it.
That's my understanding at least, I don't want to comment overmuch on a deal I have not been a part of. This is all about as much transparency as I can do.
It's useful to change to a new account every few years, if not annually. The little pieces of personal information add up over time. As does your personal diction, which is easy for an LLM to pick up on."Hey ChatGPT, based on all comments made by user XYZ, build a detailed profile of the users interests, leanings, occupation, geographic location, and provide list of possible corresponding real world ID’s.”
I guess most of this is already possible with manual labor, but vacuuming all user posts up into training data will make it a lot easier.
Got it. Thanks for the response. Hopefully they'll say yes, since it seems pretty clear that their intent was to exclude comments, but they assumed all the comments would live under /comments/.The company determines what goes in our robots.txt. That said, I am asking if we can do exactly that: block /civis/.
The nonsense spewing from you and Ken on this thread is breaking my heart, literally and sincerely. It’s completely tone deaf.Just to keep making this part clear: nobody is making any money off of comments. We are not selling them to OpenAI. Ken has specifically stated this.
This is my understanding based on our article and Ken's comments and no insider knowledge:
The issue is the deal between Condé and Open AI removed our block on scraping Ars which was in our robots.txt file. Which means it does technically open up scraping the forum since that's under our main URL. I don't think we are aware they are, or even care, but they could. We don't see any money for it.
We are attempting to block the forum from scraping in our robots.txt file (/civis/ which is the path to all forum comments), but we have to get permission to do so since it's technically part of a larger deal, and can't just unilaterally do it.
That's my understanding at least, I don't want to comment overmuch on a deal I have not been a part of. This is all about as much transparency as I can do.
This is why although I am disappointed I don't subscribe. The staff here don't really have much control and wouldn't be able to prevent OpenAI and others from scraping even if they wanted to. And they get something out of it, which is deserved for the community and good news coverage. If Ars is gone it leave not many good alternatives for tech coverage.I can't let perfect be the enemy of good, especially in a reality where perfect is likely impossible to find.
Probably higher fidelity than you expect. People here are justifiably skeptical but I'm not.Yay! Now we will all have immortal low-fidelity versions of ourselves!
Looking at the comment numbers from articles post-“we are/aren’t making money from getting a bunch of money to our corporate parent for maybe using your content with OpenAI” trainwreck announcement, I think the user community has spoken with their wallets appropriately.
You know full well that the beef people have here is with OpenAI specifically.Something I think people have forgotten: Ars Technica has been monetizing our comments from the very beginning. The engagement in the forums is a large part of why many, if not the vast majority of subscribers choose to do so.
So the outrage over CN making a buck off of the forums potentially being used to help train an LLM (which is definitely already happening) falls a bit flat.
Kinda odd how that wasn't even mentioned in the article. And they could have even just allowed you to edit but kept a copy as backup so nobody would even notice. Not sure what what this move achieved other than pissing people off. In fact the comment have more pissed off people than an Elon Musk story. Impressive.I haven't been editing old comments, and I went back to check this comment from a couple hours ago: it's not editable. If it used to be something enabled on a case-to-case basis, it seems to be universal now.
I'm an expert in my field, with decades of experience in real-world application of that subject matter (plus leadership and people management) built through expenditure of my own time and money. My input on those subjects is absolutely worth compensation and I will not give it away on a website that claims what I post only to sell / trade it to search or AI.I don't get why people think their comments are so valuable that they should be excluded. Reeks of self-importance that people think their comments on a website so amazingly profound that they should be omitted or that compensation should be in order.
Enjoy the well-deserved drink. I hope you are right. I will definitely still read Ars in the future, but commenting for the direct benefit of CN and OpenAI isn't really my thing. Will look forward to the hoped-for update soon. I wish I shared your optimism, but given that Reddit is essentially all non-authoritative content and OpenAI was willing to shell over cash for it, I am not overly hopeful that OpenAI is solely interested in the great stuff you guys write. The articles are what, 10% of the text on Ars? In a world that's increasingly AI-generated, they would be fools not to want the human comments, too.This is my last post for now, it's after 6pm, I need dinner, and I just don't think I can do anything to really help much beyond what I've said.
But my utterly personal guess, based on nothing but feelings, that I cannot promise anything from? I think it's the opposite of slim. I don't think OpenAI cares at all about our user comments, and is purely interested in authoritative article content, and figuring out how they're going to move into a future where the next NY Times isn't suing them.
I could be full of shit. I have zero knowledge of the deal, I'm not involved, I cannot speak to it even if I wanted to. And if I was involved I'd probably have to say even less honestly.
Pure conjecture and opinion time!
I really think this is an oversight that could have been avoided, was lost in the shuffle, and we're going to fix it and still pay the price for it. And that's why I'm going to drink this canned Mai Tai that's more alcohol than delicious and try and take the rest of the night off.
It is and that has never made much sense to me. They are maybe the most prominent player but hardly the least ethical. Meta doesn't get nearly the hate it deserves and Anthropic isn't that much better than OpenAI.You know full well that the beef people have here is with OpenAI specifically.
Ditto. I have made tens of thousands of dollars, outside of my primary job, selling my thoughts on subjects that frequently appear on Ars. I have always been OK freely donating that knowledge to the community in exchange for the insight I have received from the community. I am not OK doing it for the direct financial benefit of CN and OpenAI. Community gets it for free. Corporations pay. Pretty simple, really.I'm an expert in my field, with decades of experience in real-world application of that subject matter (plus leadership and people management) built through expenditure of my own time and money. My input on those subjects is absolutely worth compensation and I will not give it away on a website that claims what I post only to sell / trade it to search or AI.
I'm willing to be there's a large number of users on this site that can say the same.
Zero chance. Ukraine war thread is 1744 pages and counting. That's nearly 70,000 posts. This thread won't hit even 10% of that. Probably won't even hit 5% of that.Any chance this thread will be the longest in Ars history? I've been here awhile. People come, people go.
It would be foolish not to. On 95% of technical matters there are some very authoritative answers and these can be weighted with the metadata you already have.I don't think OpenAI cares at all about our user comments
My last comment.
In other words, as of now the comments are part of the deal and CN is therefore making money off them since they are part of the deal. Let's not act like OpenAI doesn't see value in forum comments or the comments are accidentally included in the deal and no one involved thought about them. OpenAI most certainly did and I'd be shocked if CN didn't either.
So, right now, someone is making money off the comments. And I'll be really shocked if you're allowed to have the comments not included since they are no doubt something OpenAI would like clear rights to and intended to have rights to as well.
Ditto. I have made tens of thousands of dollars, outside of my primary job, selling my thoughts on subjects that frequently appear on Ars. I have always been OK freely donating that knowledge to the community in exchange for the insight I have received from the community. I am not OK doing it for the direct financial benefit of CN and OpenAI. Community gets it for free. Corporations pay. Pretty simple, really.
Until the "CN isn't actually selling the comments" update gets posted, see you later, Ars!