AI Agents robots.txt Builder | Dark Visitors
A handy resource for keeping your blocklist up to date in your robots.txt
file.
Though the name of the website is unfortunate with its racism-via-laziness nomenclature.
A handy resource for keeping your blocklist up to date in your robots.txt
file.
Though the name of the website is unfortunate with its racism-via-laziness nomenclature.
A solid detailed in-depth report.
The sheer amount of resources needed to support the current and forecast demand from AI is colossal and unprecedented.
I hope to make something that could only exist because I made it. Something that is the one thing that it is. Not an average sentence. Not a visual approximation of other people’s work. Not a stolen concept that boils lakes and uses more electricity than anything in my household.
At this point, it really does seem like “AI” is “bullshit you don’t need or is done better in other ways, but we’ve just spent literally billions on this so we really need you to use it, even though it’s nowhere as good as what we were already doing,” and everything else is just unsexy functionality that makes what you do marginally easier or better. I’m sorry we live in a world where enshittification is being marketed as The Hot And Sexy Thing, but just because we’re in that world, doesn’t mean you have to accept it.
“AI” is heralded (by those who claim it to replace workers as well as those that argue for it as a mere tool) as a thing to drop into your workflows to create whatever gains promised. It’s magic in the literal sense. You learn a few spells/prompts and your problems go poof. But that was already bullshit when we talked about introducing other digital tools into our workflows.
And we’ve been doing this for decades now, with every new technology we spend a lot of money to get a lot of bloody noses for way too little outcome. Because we keep not looking at actual, real problems in front of us – that the people affected by them probably can tell you at least a significant part of the solution to. No we want a magic tool to make the problem disappear. Which is a significantly different thing than solving it.
From a browser bug this morning, back to the birth of hypertext in 1945, with a look forward to a possible future for web browsers.
You’re in a desert, you see a tortoise lying on its back, and your call is very important to us.
Naming things is hard, and sometimes harmful.
I listened to a day of talks on AI at UX Brighton, and I came away disappointed by what wasn’t mentioned.
It’s almost as though humans prefer to use post-hoc justifications rather than being rational actors.