Creative Commons announces tentative support for AI ‘pay-to-crawl’ ...
This highlights that after announcing earlier this year a framework for an open ai ecosystem, the nonprofit creative commons has come out in favor of “pay-to-crawl” technology — a system to automate compensation of website content when accessed by machines, like ai webcrawlers This highlights that creative commons (cc) is best known for spearheading the licensing movement that allows creators to share their works while retaining copyright Experts suggest that in july, the organization announced a plan to provide a legal and technical framework for dataset sharing between companies that control the data and the ai providers that want to train on it This highlights that now, the nonprofit is tentatively backing pay-to-crawl systems, saying it is “cautiously supportive This highlights that ” “implemented responsibly, pay-to-crawl could represent a way for websites to sustain the creation and sharing of their content, and manage substitutive uses, keeping content publicly accessible where it might otherwise not be shared or would disappear behind even more restrictive paywalls,” a cc blog post said Experts suggest that spearheaded by companies like cloudflare, the idea behind pay-to-crawl would be to charge ai bots every time they scrape a site to collect its content for model training and updates Experts suggest that in the past, websites freely allowed webcrawlers to index their content for inclusion into search engines like google Interestingly, they benefited from this arrangement by seeing their sites listed in search results, which drove visitors and clicks
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