mirror of
https://git.sr.ht/~seirdy/seirdy.one
synced 2024-11-23 21:02:09 +00:00
New note: opting out of LLM indexing
This commit is contained in:
parent
fb66d67114
commit
2a8d60b896
1 changed files with 17 additions and 0 deletions
17
content/notes/opting-out-of-llm-indexing.md
Normal file
17
content/notes/opting-out-of-llm-indexing.md
Normal file
|
@ -0,0 +1,17 @@
|
|||
---
|
||||
title: "Opting out of LLM indexing"
|
||||
date: 2023-04-21T22:40:04-07:00
|
||||
replyURI: "https://chriscoyier.net/2023/04/21/the-secret-list-of-websites/"
|
||||
replyTitle: "“the secret list of websites”"
|
||||
replyType: "BlogPosting"
|
||||
replyAuthor: "Chris Coyier"
|
||||
replyAuthorURI: "https://chriscoyier.net/"
|
||||
#syndicatedCopies:
|
||||
# - title: 'The Fediverse'
|
||||
# url: ''
|
||||
---
|
||||
I added an entry to [my robots.txt](https://seirdy.one/robots.txt) to block ChatGPT's crawler, but blocking crawling isn't the same as blocking indexing; it looks like Google chose to use the [Common Crawl](https://commoncrawl.org/) for this and sidestep the need to do crawling of its own. That's a strange decision; after all, Google has a much larger proprietary index at its disposal.
|
||||
|
||||
A "secret list of websites" was an ironic choice of words, given that this originates from the Common Crawl. It's sad to see Common Crawl (ab)used for this, but I suppose we should have seen it coming.
|
||||
|
||||
I know Google tells authors how to qualify/disqualify from rich results, but I don't see any docs for opting a site out of LLM/Bard training.
|
Loading…
Reference in a new issue