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"On Saturday, Triplegangers CEO Oleksandr Tomchuk was alerted that his company’s e-commerce site was down. It looked to be some kind of distributed denial-of-service attack.

He soon discovered the culprit was a bot from OpenAI that was relentlessly attempting to scrape his entire, enormous site.

“We have over 65,000 products, each product has a page,” Tomchuk told TechCrunch. “Each page has at least three photos.”

OpenAI was sending “tens of thousands” of server requests trying to download all of it, hundreds of thousands of photos, along with their detailed descriptions.

“OpenAI used 600 IPs to scrape data, and we are still analyzing logs from last week, perhaps it’s way more,” he said of the IP addresses the bot used to attempt to consume his site.

“Their crawlers were crushing our site,” he said “It was basically a DDoS attack.”

Triplegangers’ website is its business. The seven-employee company has spent over a decade assembling what it calls the largest database of “human digital doubles” on the web, meaning 3D image files scanned from actual human models.

It sells the 3D object files, as well as photos — everything from hands to hair, skin, and full bodies — to 3D artists, video game makers, anyone who needs to digitally recreate authentic human characteristics."

techcrunch.com/2025/01/10/how-…

#CyberSecurity #AI #GenerativeAI #OpenAI #WebScraping #DDoS #AITraining

in reply to Miguel Afonso Caetano

So, an AI bot was trying to steal all of the product from a legitimate business and, in the process, crashed the business's whole source of income?
We don't need regulations for the scare-the-uninformed version of AI that Sam Altman likes to bloviate about...
We need laws and penalties for the actual theft Altman and his cronies are perpetrating on a daily basis.
They are too big for any small business to fight in court. This is a thing only a government can remedy w/ out violence.
in reply to Tess Arnold

@TessRants
Good point!

1. Unlikely the new Confederate American government will stop this outrage. Maybe other countries?

2. Or could a law firm sue, to recover $ for DDOS-victim companies? Maybe impossible here, with the Confederates determined to stop class actions. (Who do those Little People think they are?)

3. If more companies put copyright notices on their sites, might it help lawsuits vs AI?

The only real hope: to get a new govt, not of the rats but against them.

in reply to Miguel Afonso Caetano

This has happened to us on several of the over 300 domains we host.

The COSTS to support OpenAI harvesting, bandwidth, and the rest of the AI bot farms stealing copyrighted content is crushing us.

Unknown parent

mastodon - Link to source
su_liam
@sigsegv @mike Remember when people thought the bot creators might maybe just respect robots.txt out of kindness and human decency? Those were good times. Does anybody even bother to put robots.txt in their html anymore? I mean, why bother, right?
Unknown parent

@mike This is what concerns me about even putting a static site back online. How do I protect myself from crazy charges when rogue bots like this spam the site with requests?
@mike