copperbadge answered:
I don’t know which post about the update you mean, Anon, but I assume the update referenced is the one the OTW posted on 5/13 about AI scraping and ChatGPT. I do have some thoughts but I want to go through the post a little because I don’t think I’m actually needed to interpret this one – I think with some critical thought anyone can, but a lot of people don’t get critical thinking training in school, so I want to do a little demo of it.
Pre-emptively, this is a list of things I’m not an expert on: copyright law, data scraping, AI, website design, and the legality of certain forms of freedom of expression. But honestly for this you don’t need to be.
First and foremost, we really have no reason to disbelieve OTW when they speak on this subject. While there’s debate and discussion about AO3 and certainly it’s imperfect in a number of directions, they are pretty transparent, generally speaking. I don’t believe there is a reason to approach AO3 with an assumption of disingenuity in a general sense. However, the organization is run by humans, who are imperfect and can sometimes be deceitful, so it’s good to always approach public statements with a critical eye.
So the post is talking about two separate but related issues: preventing AIs from scraping AO3, and policy on AI-generated works being posted. What we are looking for, from both, is a combination of things: we want what they’re saying to make sense both in the world, and within the statement – no contradictions, nothing that seems illogical, nothing that seems like baseless assumption or generalization. We want simple prose, and we want a look at the reasoning behind the actions they’re taking.
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