Current status: In "Energy Saving Mode" until further notice. 💤
If you’re the CEO of napping, this Kyoky tee was made for you. No alarms allowed.

Shop the "Too Tired" Grey Cat Tee. Link in bio. 🐾
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https://www.redbubble.com/shop/ap/178646309
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#Love, #Cat, #Heart, #Animal, #Animals, #Red, #Cute, #Cats, #Orange, #Adorable, #CuteCats, #Flying, #Angel, #Fanart, #Charm, #Scrapping, #Scrap

Kelly Evans: Goodbye, Google – CNBC

Kelly Evans, Co-Host of CNBC’s Power Lunch. David A. Grogan | CNBC

The Exchange

Kelly Evans: Goodbye, Google

Published Wed, Jan 7 20269:51 AM EST

Kelly Evans@KellyCNBC Share

Kelly Evans, Co-Host of CNBC’s Power Lunch. David A. Grogan | CNBC

Kelly Evans, Co-Host of CNBC’s Power Lunch, David A. Grogan | CNBC

For the first time yesterday, when I went to Google (which I do less and less of anymore), it asked me if I wanted to switch over to AI mode. I figured sure, since I’ve been using its AI summaries anyhow, and it put me into what looked like a full-blown version of Gemini or ChatGPT. No ads. No blue links. 

What this tells me is that the era of Google as we knew it is officially over. And I, for one, certainly do not mourn that. As great as the product was when it was first introduced, is as bad as it became towards the end. Good luck finding any really useful links buried beneath all of their ads. Smaller businesses were justifiably furious at having to pay to compete up top against the deep-pocketed big guys for traffic they were rightly owed. 

The search engine, in other words, had become nowhere near as effective as it used to be. And while regulators drool at the opportunity to jump in and set rules and prosecute offenders and collect big fines, it’s far better for society that monopolies are disrupted because they become less useful and leave an opening for better products to break through. 

Enter ChatGPT. 

Now, the irony here is twofold. One, after a few early missteps, Google has answered ChatGPT with its own excellent chatbot, Gemini, that we are using more and more of in our house. (If you want a chuckle, ask it to give you this job/personality test.) Shares of parent company Alphabet soared 65% last year, for the best performance of all the “Magnificent 7.” 

So while it’s goodbye to Google as a search box, the company itself has pivoted nicely, and regulators can at least breathe somewhat easy that they have a formidable rival now, with ChatGPT’s 900 million active weekly users. 

Secondly, the real question is what happens to the entire internet ecosystem that once relied upon Google search traffic. I’m thinking of recipe bloggers, websites like Vice and Buzzfeed that once had hundreds of employees, and so forth. I’m not sure how much of the former internet economy realizes it’s never coming back, and they will have to dream up entirely new business models. 

I also expect the lawyers are salivating. The class action suits against chatbots that scraped the internet of content that people once made a living off of must surely be coming apace. News providers can survive and even thrive in a world where chatbots have to pay to maintain access to up-to-the-minute information for users, but someone who gave the internet their maple-glazed salmon recipe? Forget about it. 

Continue/Read Original Article Here: Kelly Evans: Goodbye, Google

#AI #artificialIntelligence #BusinessModels #ChatGPT #CNBC #Gemini #GoogleGoodbye #KellyEvans #Scrapping #SearchEngines #SearchInternet #SEO #TooManyAds #WebSites

The New York Times sues Perplexity for producing ‘verbatim’ copies of its work – The Verge

Credit: NYT Times, gettyimages-2249036304

The New York Times sues Perplexity for producing ‘verbatim’ copies of its work

The NYT alleges Perplexity ‘unlawfully crawls, scrapes, copies, and distributes’ work from its website.

by Emma Roth, Dec 5, 2025, 7:42 AM PS, Emma Roth is a news writer who covers the streaming wars, consumer tech, crypto, social media, and much more. Previously, she was a writer and editor at MUO.

The New York Times has escalated its legal battle against the AI startup Perplexity, as it’s now suing the AI “answer engine” for allegedly producing and profiting from responses that are “verbatim or substantially similar copies” of the publication’s work.

The lawsuit, filed in a New York federal court on Friday, claims Perplexity “unlawfully crawls, scrapes, copies, and distributes” content from the NYT. It comes after the outlet’s repeated demands for Perplexity to stop using content from its website, as the NYT sent cease-and-desist notices to the AI startup last year and most recently in July, according to the lawsuit. The Chicago Tribune also filed a copyright lawsuit against Perplexity on Thursday.

The New York Times sued OpenAI for copyright infringement in December 2023, and later inked a deal with Amazon, bringing its content to products like Alexa.

Perplexity became the subject of several lawsuits after reporting from Forbes and Wired revealed that the startup had been skirting websites’ paywalls to provide AI-generated summaries — and in some cases, copies — of their work. TheNYT makes similar accusations in its lawsuit, stating that Perplexity’s crawlers “have intentionally ignored or evaded technical content protection measures,” such as the robots.txt file, which indicates the parts of a website crawlers can access.

Perplexity attempted to smooth things over by launching a program to share ad revenue with publishers last year, which it later expanded to include its Comet web browser in August.

Related

“By copying The Times’s copyrighted content and creating substitutive output derived from its works, obviating the need for users to visit The Times’s website or purchase its newspaper, Perplexity is misappropriating substantial subscription, advertising, licensing, and affiliate revenue opportunities that belong rightfully and exclusively to The Times,” the lawsuit states.

Continue/Read Original Article Here: The New York Times sues Perplexity for producing ‘verbatim’ copies of its work | The Verge

#AI #artificialIntelligence #Copyright #Crawlers #Distribution #Lawsuit #NYTWork #OpenAI #Perplexity #RobotsTxt #Scrapping #Sues #TheNewYorkTimes #TheVerge #VerbatimCopies

Government proposes scrapping regional councillors and nudging councils towards amalgamation

Under this proposal, the regional council as an organisation would remain, but the mayors of the councils …
#NewsBeep #News #Headlines #abolishing #amalgamate #amalgamation #and #aucklandstyle #authorities #councillors #councils #eventually #Government #into #Local #NewZealand #nudging #NZ #proposes #proposing #regional #scrapping #territorial #towards #unitary #zealands
https://www.newsbeep.com/270932/

Anda-se a falar de milhares de contas clonadas neste servidor "mastodon.arell.ai" para fazer #scrapping e alimentar um #IA com aquilo que postamos por aqui.

E de chegar mesmo ao ponto de conseguir aldrabar a verificação de contas.

Isto confere?

Alguém já verificou se teve a conta clonada?

#fediblock #arellai

Reform’s Clean Energy Crackdown Would Cost 60,000 Jobs and Raise Bills, Says Study

Nigel Farage’s “economically illiterate” climate policies could wipe £92 billion off the UK economy, according to the New Economics Foundation.

Reform UK’s policies to “scrap net zero” would cost more than 60,000 jobs and wipe £92 billion off the UK economy, according to a new study.

Nigel Farage’s party — which took control of 10 councils in the recent local elections — this week claimed that the government could save £45 billion every year by ditching climate policies.

However, analysis by the New Economics Foundation (NEF) published today suggests that Reform’s policies would cost jobs and investment, and could raise household energy bills.

Reform’s Clean Energy Crackdown Would Cost 60,000 Jobs and Raise Bills, Says Study, desmog.com

#fantasyEconomics #NEF #NigelFarage #ReformInefficiencyDepartment #scrapping #InTheNews

Reform’s Clean Energy Crackdown Would Cost 60,000 Jobs and Raise Bills, Says Study

Reform UK’s policies to “scrap net zero” would cost more than 60,000 jobs and wipe £92 billion off the UK economy, according to a new study. Nigel Farage’s party — which took control of 10 councils in the recent local elections — this week claimed that the government could save £45 billion every year by […]

DeSmog

The cost of Reform UK’s anti-environmental policies

Reform UK has said it will scrap net zero and cut all renewable subsidies – the impact would be hugely damaging

[…]

Reform UK has said it will scrap net zero with various figures banded around by the party’s representatives for how much this will raise – anywhere from £225bn to £45bn. The Institute for Government, who’s analysis is used to calculate the larger of these two figures, has already said the Party has misrepresented its analysis and failed to acknowledge that most of this investment will come from the private sector – in other words, Reform UK’s policies would likely destroy much needed investment into the UK economy.

But what is the real cost of their anti-renewable and anti-net zero policies? It is important to ensure all political parties are accountable to the public and the impacts of their policies are estimated in a transparent and consistent manner.

The cost of Reform UK’s anti-environmental policies, New Economics Foundation

#environment #failedToDoHomework #fantasyEconomics #ReformInefficiencyDepartment #scrapping #InTheNews

The cost of Reform UK's anti-environmental policies

Reform UK has said it will scrap net zero and cut all renewable subsidies - the impact would be hugely damaging

New Economics Foundation

New Reform council abolishes flood committee

A newly elected Reform UK council has abolished a flooding committee, despite other parties calling for it to be saved.

Lincolnshire County Council’s Flood and Water Management Scrutiny Committee was axed by the party which took control of the authority in this month’s elections.

New Reform council abolishes flood committee, BBC

#committeeMeetings #danger #DOLGE #floods #Lincolnshire #scrapping #InTheNews

Reform UK-run Lincolnshire County Council scraps flood committee

The work will be incorporated into another committee despite all other parties opposing the change.

BBC News
💼 Industry bigwigs are throwing a tantrum over Trump's "genius" plan to scrap Energy Star, as if their lives depended on it. 🌟 Who knew saving the planet could be so inconvenient for business? 🙄
https://insideclimatenews.org/news/08052025/energy-star-program-could-be-eliminated-by-trump-administration/ #EnergyStar #Scrapping #BusinessTantrum #EnvironmentalImpact #PlanetSaving #Inconvenience #HackerNews #ngated
As Trump Administration Seeks to Shut Down Energy Star Program, Industry Groups Call to Save It - Inside Climate News

Despite having industry support and saving consumers half a trillion dollars over the decades, the program could be eliminated imminently.

Inside Climate News
"Cloudflare says rather than block bots, AI Labyrinth fights back by making them process data that has nothing to do with a given website’s actual data." #AI #scrapping
https://www.theverge.com/news/634345/cloudflare-ai-labyrinth-web-scraping-bots-training-data
Cloudflare is luring web-scraping bots into an ‘AI Labyrinth’

Cloudflare’s new AI Labyrinth tool sends malicious AI web crawlers into a hole full of useless, AI-generated webpages.

The Verge