Xorte logo

News Markets Groups

USA | Europe | Asia | World| Stocks | Commodities



Add a new RSS channel

 
 


Keywords

2024-06-28 15:30:03| Engadget

Amazon Web Services has started an investigation to determine whether Perplexity AI is breaking its rules, according to Wired. To, be precise, the company's cloud division is looking into allegations that the service is using a crawler, which is hosted on its servers, that ignores the Robots Exclusion Protocol. This protocol is a web standard, wherein developers put a robots.txt file on a domain containing instructions on whether bots can or can't access a particular page. Complying with those instructions is voluntary, but crawlers from reputable companies have generally been respecting them since web developers started implementing the standard in the '90s.  In an earlier piece, Wired reported that it discovered a virtual machine that was bypassing its website's robots.txt instructions. That machine was hosted on an Amazon Web Services server using the IP address 44.221.181.252 that's "certainly operated by Perplexity." It reportedly visited other Condé Nast properties hundreds of times over the past three months to scrape their content, as well. The Guardian, Forbes and The New York Times had also detected it visiting their publications multiple times, Wired said. To confirm whether Perplexity truly was scraping its content, Wired entered headlines or short descriptions of its articles into the company's chatbot. The tool then responded with results that closely paraphrased its articles "with minimal attribution."  A recent Reuters report claimed that Perplexity isn't the only AI company that's bypassing robots.txt files to gather content used to train large language models. However, Amazon's investigation seems to be focused on Perplexity AI only. An Amazon spokesperson told Wired that its customers have to comply with robots.txt instructions when crawling websites. "AWSs terms of service prohibit customers from using our services for any illegal activity, and our customers are responsible for complying with our terms and all applicable laws," they said.  Perplexity spokesperson Sara Platnick told Wired that the company has already responded to Amazon's inquiries and denied that its crawlers are bypassing the Robots Exclusion Protocol. "Our PerplexityBot which runs on AWS respects robots.txt, and we confirmed that Perplexity-controlled services are not crawling in any way that violates AWS Terms of Service," she said. Platnick admitted, however, that PerplexityBot will ignore robots.text when a user includes a specific URL in their chatbot inquiry.  Aravind Srinivas, the CEO of Perplexity, also previously denied that his company is "ignoring the Robot Exclusions Protocol and then lying about it." Srinivas did admit to Fast Company that Perplexity uses third-party web crawlers on top of its own, and that the bot Wired identified was one of them.This article originally appeared on Engadget at https://www.engadget.com/amazon-investigating-perplexity-ai-after-accusations-it-scrapes-websites-without-consent-133003374.html?src=rss


Category: Marketing and Advertising

 

Latest from this category

12.02WhatsApp is now fully blocked in Russia
12.02The best record players for 2026
12.02Apple acquires Severance and will produce future seasons in-house
12.02Diablo II: Resurrected is adding warlock as a brand new player class
12.02Pickle it forward: McDonalds digital gherkin bank connects lovers and haters
11.02The great RAMaggedon of 2026 might have just claimed the Steam Deck
11.02How to cancel Mullvad VPN
11.02Anthropic beefs up Claude's free tier as OpenAI prepares to stuff ads into ChatGPT's
Marketing and Advertising »

All news

12.02How the baby food method can help you accomplish your biggest goals
12.02Major staffing cuts are coming to D.C.s Kennedy Center ahead of its 2-year closure
12.02The IOC is barring this Ukrainian athlete over messaging on his helmet at the Milan Cortina Games
12.025 things to know about Lockdown Mode, iPhones security feature
12.02Capital Ones giant LaGuardia Airport restaurant shows how credit card issuers are redefining travel perks
12.02Discord is asking for your ID. The backlash is about more than privacy
12.02Sweethearts has the most valuable real estate of all Valentines Day candy
12.02Memory chip stocks: Why Micron and Sandisk are soaring today as shortage fuels global RAM demand
More »
Privacy policy . Copyright . Contact form .