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Hacker news wants you to vist the site, look at the main page, enter threads and participate in discussion.

When you swap in an AI and ask what are the current stories. The AI fetches the front page and every thread and feeds it back to you. You are less likely to participate in discussion because you've already had the info summarized.



Who cares what Hacker News wants? You’re not obliged to participate in discussion.

Am I supposed to spend money on Amazon.com when I visit the website just because Amazon wants me to?


If most people quit spending money on Amazon then Amazon stops being worth running.

If most people stop discussing things on HN, and the discussion is indeed one of the major reasons it’s kept running, then HN stops being worth running.


Whats the point of a human coming to a site if all the threads and empty and its front page is a glorified RSS feed for lazy peoples AI agents?


Who cares what you want?


Most humans place the desires of human beings over the desires of companies.


Indeed. But that is a false equivalence - this is conflict of desires between small companies and creators and an AI-corp where the AI-corp wants to steal their content and give it to users with their shop branding.

> You’re not obliged to participate in discussion.

Are website owners obligated to serve content to AI agents and/or LLM scrapers?


It was a corollary example


Foo news wants you to visit the site, look at the main page, watch the ads, click on them and buy the products advertised by third parties which will give money to Foo news in exchange for this service.

And yet people install ad blockers and defend their freedom to not participate in this because they don't want to be annoyed by ads.

They claim that since they are free to not buy an advertised product, why would they be forced to see ads for it. But Foo news claims that they are also free to not waste bandwidth to serve their free website to people who declare (by using an ad blocker or the modern alternative: AI aummarizera) they won't participate in the funding of the service


It's not ads. We have ads in paper magazines and newspapers and no one went around with scissors to remove them. It's obnoxious ads, designed to violently grabs your attention and trackers (malware). It's like a newspapers giving your address to a whole crew of salemens that intrudes on your property at 3am and looking at you sleeping and installing cameras in your bathroom. All so that they can jump at you in the street to loudly claim they have the underwear you told your partner you like. If you're going to be that invasive about my person, then I'm going to be that forceful about restrictions.


This is one of the dumbest things about ad networks. Google has enough data about your watching habits on Youtube and their algorithm is basically as good as it gets in terms of showing you what you want to watch and getting you hooked on it, but the moment they show you ads, all that technical expertise appears to have vanished into thin air and all they show you is fake mobile ads?

People hate obnoxious ads because the money that pays for them is essentially a bribe to artificially elevate content above its deserved ranking. It feels like you're being manipulated into an unfavorable trade.


> their algorithm is basically as good as it gets in terms of showing you what you want to watch and getting you hooked on it

It is? Are we talking about the same YouTube? I get absolutely useless recommendations, I get un-hooked within a couple videos, and I even keep getting recommendations for the same videos I've literally watched yesterday. Who in the world gets hooked by this??


> We have ads in paper magazines and newspapers and no one went around with scissors to remove them.

I never saw people bother with scissors but I've seen people pulling the ads out of the newspaper countless times.


> And yet people install ad blockers and defend their freedom to not participate in this because they don't want to be annoyed by ads.

I think this is a pretty different scenario. Here the user and the news website are talking directly to each other, but then the user is making a choice around what to do with the content the news website send to them. With AI agents, there is a company inserting themselves between the user and the news website and acting as a middleman.

It seems reasonable to me that the news website might say they only want to deal with users and not middlemen.


I understand; but as an excercise to better understand this problem I'll keep doing devil's advocate and I'll raise with:

What if my executive assistant reading the news website and giving me a digest?

Would the website owners rather prefer me doing my reading directly?


Yes. Because they want to own your attention and that only works if they are interfacing directly to you.

I remember that Samsung was at one time offering to play non-skippable full-screen apps on their newest 8K OLED TVs and their argument was precisely that these ads will reach those rich people who normally pay extra to avoid getting spammed with ads. Or going with your executive assistant example, there are situations where it makes sense to bribe them to get access to you and/or your data. E.g. "evil maid attack".


With all the crypto development how come we haven't got to

  HTTP/1.1 402 Payment Required
  WWW-price: 0.0000001 BTC, 0.000001 ETH, 0.00001 DOGE
> You are less likely to participate in discussion

you (or AI on your behalf) paid instead. Many sites would probably like it better.


If people were forced to pay for websites by the http request people would demand that websites stop loading a ton of externally hosted JS, stop filling sites with ads, and would demand that websites actually have content worth the price.

There are so many links I click on these days that are such trash I'd be demanding refunds constantly.


>There are so many links I click on these days that are such trash

That is why AI "summarization" becomes a necessary intermediate layer. You'd not see nor trash nor ads, and thus the payment instead of being exposed to the ads. AI saves the Internet :)


It's not a development problem, it's an adoption problem. Publishers are desperate to sell us on a $20+/month subscription, they don't want to offer convenient affordable access to single articles.


$20/month would be nice if it wasn't a tier with less ads. I want no ads, and full-text rss feeds (because I want to use my clients to read). It's like how Netflix refuses to build a basic search and filter, or Spotify refuses to an actual library manager. They don't want you in control of your consumption.




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