{
"path": "/human-generated-content-3",
"site": "at://did:plc:xgvzy7ni6ig6ievcbls5jaxe/site.standard.publication/3mgfwckliwc2m",
"tags": [
"human generated content",
"activitypub",
"apple",
"fediverse",
"generative-ai",
"social media",
"elonmusk"
],
"$type": "site.standard.document",
"title": "Human-Generated Content 3",
"publishedAt": "2024-06-20T18:39:10.000Z",
"textContent": "> \"My goal for the next issue is to not talk about the Fediverse.\"\n\nThat was me in the last issue of Human-Generated Content and I would like to start by apologizing for this very predictable lie.\n\n---\n\nHello, again!\n\nLast time, we talked about the diverging strategies between publishers choosing AI or the social web - let's continue that thread today. If you didn't notice, there were a lot of AI stories over the last two weeks. And by AI I mean \"Apple Intelligence\", which I will never say unironically ever again.\n\nToday we'll chat about A[rtificial]I, how the media should cover topics like Elon Musk's latest tantrum, and we'll end on an optimistic note about media's place in the future of the open web.\n\nYeah, Fine. Let's Talk About AI\n\nThat's probably what Tim Cook said when Apple was planning the WWDC24 keynote. If I'm being honest - by the end of the recorded presentation, Tim seemed exhausted by all the hype and looked like he was ready to say \"are you happy now?\"\n\nI'm not going to delve too much into Apple's foray into LLM-based AI because, quite frankly, we have no idea if it's going to live up to the promises they're making. The concepts seem really smart but we've been fooled before. One of the many consumer-facing problems with non-deterministic technologies like LLMs is that we find it funny when it says something stupid, but if it doesn't handle something as time-sensitive as a phone action properly - we likely won't try it again. I'll hold off until it's given a fair shot in the wild.\n\nWhat I do want to talk about briefly, however, is Perplexity.\n\nSarah Emerson and Rashi Shrivastava of Forbes report:\n\n> Perplexity appears to be plagiarizing journalists’ work through its newly launched feature, Perplexity Pages, which lets people curate content on a particular topic. Multiple posts that have been “curated” by the Perplexity team on its platform are strikingly similar to original stories from multiple publications\n\nSarah and Rashi then go over numerous examples where Perplexity copies articles word-for-word and creates searchable \"Pages\", essentially replacing the original creation with a copy. \n\nPlagiarism as a Service, if you will.\n\nPerplexity ended up responding saying they know things are rough around the edges but they're working on it. They also went ahead and said that they're totally working with media companies to license their content. Cool, but the cart goes behind the horse.\n\nBut wait, there's more! As it turns out, Perplexity is actively ignoring a web-wide handshake that tells bots to not scrape content from a page. Robb Knight, dev at Radweb and MacStories, discovered that Perplexity just straight up ignores the fact that they've been added to the robots.txt file:\n\n> they're using headless browsers to scrape content, ignoring robots.txt, and not sending their user agent string\n\nI believe the technical term for such behavior is \"shady af\". \n\nIn a vacuum, we can look at these as slip-ups. What we see here instead is a pattern of behavior that puts anything that doesn't benefit Perplexity on the backburner, leaving behind an intense focus on delivering something that differentiates them from every other AI product in this inflating bubble. And we all know there's a lot more AI products than there should be.\n\nSpeaking of a lot more than there should be - let's talk about Elon Musk.\n\nWe Need To (Not) Talk About Elon\n\nThis week, Apple not only announced their own AI features, they also showed off an integration with ChatGPT where Apple hands off requests it can't handle to another chatbot. Their grand plan is to enable many third-parties to integrate. \n\nThis seemed to really tick off Elon Musk, who used to be the biggest donor of OpenAI until they didn't let him be CEO. He threw a tantrum and took his money with him. Elon also started a competing AI company called xAI that's focused on being \"funny\" and \"not woke\", whatever all that means.\n\nLong story short: he got big mad that Apple chose OpenAI and a bunch of journalists decided that it's worth reporting on.\n\nElon says a lot of things every day - many of which are (gasp) lies - and angry rants every week - many of which are layered in contradictions. We don't need Elon to be a part of every news cycle, even if he tries his best to be.\n\nKarl Bode of TechDirt outlines the abusive relationship newsrooms have with Elon:\n\n> First it spent fifteen years hyping up Musk’s super-genius engineering mythology, despite mounting evidence that Musk was more of a clever credit-absconding opportunist than any sort of revolutionary thinker. After 20 years of this, the press still treats every belch the man has as worthy of the deepest analysis under the pretense they’re engaging in some sort of heady public service.\n\nMusk is one of the richest humans ever and literally has the power to control wars. He's used that money and power to purchase one of the most influential social media platforms, then changed its algorithm to focus more on him even if you signal that you don't want it to. \n\nElon doesn't need more amplification than he's already given himself and yet...here we are.\n\nOf course, the reasoning isn't because it actually needs to be reported on, it's because they know that \"Elon Musk said...\" is great for clicks. There's likely someone looking at the metrics in these newsrooms chomping at the bit for another Elon tweetstorm so they can watch the numbers go up again.\n\nJason Koebler of 404 Media also dove into those financial incentives, but has important insight into why this is unhealthy in the long-run for the media business:\n\n> Elon Musk tweets a thing is the type of easily replicable blog post that Google, Perplexity, and OpenAI are actively automating through their AI summary tools and the deals that publishers are increasingly signing with AI companies to specifically allow them to replicate such types of content more easily. It is the type of blog post that X itself is already summarizing and generating for users with the deeply unreliable yet soon-to-be-deeply integrated Grok AI.\n\nHe goes on to talk about how to use social media content in a more productive way:\n\n> they are fundamentally taking something that is easily found on social media, embedding it, and calling it a blog post. There is and can be utility explaining a social media phenomenon or weaving together a narrative based on a series of social media posts.\n\nJason isn't just talking about Elon here, he's talking about how media businesses can survive this awkward phase of the human internet. \n\nHe isn't just talking the talk either - 404 Media publishes on a platform that gives them direct contact with their audience (and is soon extending to the Fediverse). They focus on original stories that other newsrooms aren't covering, which then enables their audience to share those stories to their part of the web. Instead of depending solely on winning an SEO lottery or a social media algorithm, they're providing value to their readers and being amplified for it. And they're profitable all while doing it.\n\nSo stop with the Elon slop, we can let AI handle that. You should focus on building your web.\n\nA Web of Webs\n\nIn a follow-up to Molly White's \"We Can Have A Different Web\", Aram Zucker-Scharff (Engineering Lead at The Washington Post) outlines how we can build a more humane web by leaning on its fundamentals:\n\n> The internet then is the series of connections between people, at a huge scale. Not everyone is connected to everyone, but if you're on the internet, you're connecting to someone. So it isn't so much a world wide web as it is world wide webs. [...] The thing about webs is they are failure resistent (sp), one strand falling won't take the whole thing down. You can punch a hole through them, but webs are also rebuilt regularly, they can fail and come back quickly.\n\nAram outlines various ways you and I can help build a resilient and redundant human web of information that builds upon each other, rather than one dependent on a few black-box platforms. It's worth reading through this one and taking up at least some of these practices. I would start by building your own home(s) on the internet that you own, but there's a lot more we can all do.\n\nWhat I love about this moment is that we're seeing more and more creator-turned-owner stories popping up as we see the managed decline of the platform-owned web. Anil Dash (VP at Fastly, Prince Superfan) wrote a piece that puts into focus the New Alt Media - a group of relatively newly-minted newsrooms that act more like co-ops than they do traditional media institutions:\n\n> There’s Flaming Hydra. 404 Media. Defector. Aftermath. Racket. Hell Gate. And so many more. This isn’t a new phenomenon — several of the publications in this broad category have been around for years. But we’ve reached a tipping point, for a number of reasons. [...] And all of that is without even mentioning the important part: these new platforms are telling the stories nobody else is.\n\nThat right there is how creators, curators, and consumers are building their web of webs - original stories shared through platforms, amplified using humans that share with other humans. It's how I find articles every week for this newsletter as I build my web next to all of yours. Look, Ma - I'm doing the thing!\n\nI pointed out how we should start looking at these media companies in the last issue of this newsletter as well:\n\n> At this point, if you're not looking at these publishers as social web platforms that are hosting hand-picked bloggers, podcasters, and content creators with a publisher's infrastructure, you're not paying attention.\n\nBut with Anil's post, I think it's worth calling out that most of these New Alt Media companies are doing something important: paid tiers. They may not paywall all their content, but they have options to pay to remove ads, get extra content, and/or gain direct access to the creators among other perks. And this is a good thing - good work deserves good ",
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