Who makes money when AI reads the internet for us?

Lee Duna@lemmy.nz to Technology@lemmy.world – 171 points –
Who makes money when AI reads the internet for us?
engadget.com
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Arc Browser is better for USERS. Ad companies are just going to have to figure it out. Sounds like a "them" problem to me

Remember Google attempt at DRM for the Internet? That would in effect block this. This and similar are justifying to companies to support Google Chrome only and use their DRM.

I do not remember Google's attempt at DRM for the Internet, which is an indication of how well it went for their attempt.

They aren't done trying yet.

I just did a search, and according to the articles I've found Google abandoned the "Web Environment Integrity" API in November and removed their prototype from Chromium.

Well except that they are continuing with developing it for their Webview browser which is the web browser based of chrome that's embedded in basically every app anyways.

Plus Apple has their Web Tokens which are not being fought against which means Google will be desperate to get in on the pie that Apple is getting away with even if it means waiting and coming up with a different name for it.

It's still coming. Web DRM and person specific tracking is just around the bend once we get exhausted and distracted enough.

Then I guess I won't see whatever websites decide to use it (until it's cracked). Oh well.

Does that mean you (and me) end up drowning in a pool of 90% AI dead internet comments while everyone who stayed on Reddit or Facebook can talk to their friends in their WEI tracked & profiled walled garden?

Shitty choice.

The only solution I can see it robust moderation tools on a platform like Lemmy.

AI still gets to read everything but at least individuals/communities/instances can be blocked for bad behaviour.

What altertatives do we have right now?

No offense but I’m not sure you read or understood the main point of the article — there’s not much of an internet for users if there’s no incentive to supply it with content.

Advertisers are welcome to turn back the clock of enshittification to a time when the internet worked for both publishers and readers. They got greedy and abused the attention of readers, so I have no sympathy. Now this article adds a huge pile of entitlement that we owe them? On top of this excrement