Just a few bad Applebots
Over the past year, publishing giants like Conde Nast, News Corp, Atlantic Media and the Associated Press have been inking deals to license their content to OpenAI.
At the same time, publishers have been playing a game of Whac-A-Mole to try and block automated scraper bots from slurping up their valuable content for use in AI training models.
Wired reports that some of the biggest publishers and platforms are now moving to block Apple scraper (“applebot-extended”), including The New York Times, which is currently deep in a copyright infringement lawsuit against OpenAI. Apple offers publishers an opt-out tool, but the New York Times argues “theft of copyrighted material is not something content owners need to opt out of.”
Apple has quietly been training its own AI models, which will be rolling out this fall in iOS 18.
Wired reports that some of the biggest publishers and platforms are now moving to block Apple scraper (“applebot-extended”), including The New York Times, which is currently deep in a copyright infringement lawsuit against OpenAI. Apple offers publishers an opt-out tool, but the New York Times argues “theft of copyrighted material is not something content owners need to opt out of.”
Apple has quietly been training its own AI models, which will be rolling out this fall in iOS 18.