Perplexity’s grand theft AI

perplexity’s grand theft ai

What, exactly, is Perplexity’s innovation?

In every hype cycle, certain patterns of deceit emerge. In the last crypto boom, it was “ponzinomics” and “rug pulls.” In self-driving cars, it was “just five years away!” In AI, it’s seeing just how much unethical shit you can get away with.

Perplexity is basically a rent-seeking middleman on high-quality sources

Perplexity, which is in ongoing talks to raise hundreds of millions of dollars, is trying to create a Google Search competitor. Perplexity isn’t trying to create a “search engine,” though — it wants to create an “answer engine.” The idea is that instead of combing through a bunch of results to answer your own question with a primary source, you’ll simply get an answer Perplexity has found for you. “Factfulness and accuracy is what we care about,” Perplexity CEO Aravind Srinivas told The Verge.

That means that Perplexity is basically a rent-seeking middleman on high-quality sources. The value proposition on search, originally, was that by scraping the work done by journalists and others, Google’s results sent traffic to those sources. But by providing an answer, rather than pointing people to click through to a primary source, these so-called “answer engines” starve the primary source of ad revenue — keeping that revenue for themselves. Perplexity is among a group of vampires that include Arc Search and Google itself.

But Perplexity has taken it a step further with its Pages product, which creates a summary “report” based on those primary sources. It’s not just quoting a sentence or two to directly answer a user’s question — it’s creating an entire aggregated article, and it’s accurate in the sense that it is actively plagiarizing the sources it uses.

Forbes discovered Perplexity was dodging the publication’s paywall in order to provide a summary of an investigation the publication did of former Google CEO Eric Schmidt’s drone company. Though Forbes has a metered paywall on some of its work, the premium work — like that investigation — is behind a hard paywall. Not only did Perplexity somehow dodge the paywall but it barely cited the original investigation and ganked the original art to use for its report. (For those keeping track at home, the art thing is copyright infringement.)

“Someone else did it” is a fine argument for a five-year-old

Aggregation is not a particularly new phenomenon — but the scale at which Perplexity can aggregate, along with the copyright violation of using the original art, is pretty, hmm, remarkable. In an attempt to calm everyone down, the company’s chief business officer went to Axios to say Perplexity was developing revenue sharing plans with publications, and aw gee whiz, how come everyone was being so mean to a product still in development?

At this point, Wired jumped in, confirming a finding from Robb Knight: Perplexity’s scraping of Forbes’ work wasn’t an exception. In fact, Perplexity has been ignoring the robots.txt code that explicitly asks web crawlers not to scrape the page. Srinivas responded in Fast Company that actually, Perplexity wasn’t ignoring robots.txt; it was just using third-party scrapers that ignored it. Srinivas declined to name the third-party scraper and didn’t commit to asking that crawler to stop violating robots.txt.

“Someone else did it” is a fine argument for a five-year-old. And consider the response further. If Srinivas wanted to be ethical, he had some options here. Option one is to terminate the contract with the third-party scraper. Option two is to try to convince the scraper to honor robots.txt. Srinivas didn’t commit to either, and it seems to me, there’s a clear reason why. Even if Perplexity itself isn’t violating the code, it is reliant on someone else violating the code for its “answer engine” to work.

To add insult to injury, Perplexity plagiarized Wired’s article about it — even though Wired explicitly blocks Perplexity in its text file. The bulk of Wired’s article about the plagiarism is about legal remedies, but I’m interested in what’s going on here with robots.txt. It’s a good-faith agreement that has held up for decades now, and it’s falling apart thanks to unscrupulous AI companies — that’s right, Perplexity isn’t the only one — hoovering up just about anything that’s available in order to train their bullshit models. And remember how Srinivas said he was committed to “factfulness?” I’m not sure that’s true, either: Perplexity is now surfacing AI-generated results and actual misinformation, Forbes reports.

To my ear, Srinivas was bragging about how charming and clever his lie was

We’ve seen a lot of AI giants engage in questionably legal and arguably unethical practices in order to get the data they want. In order to prove the value of Perplexity to investors, Srinivas built a tool to scrape Twitter by pretending to be an academic researcher using API access for research. “I would call my [fake academic] projects just like Brin Rank and all these kinds of things,” Srinivas told Lex Fridman on the latter’s podcast. I assume “Brin Rank” is a reference to Google co-founder Sergey Brin; to my ear, Srinivas was bragging about how charming and clever his lie was.

I’m not the one who’s telling you the foundation of Perplexity is lying to dodge established principles that hold up the web. Its CEO is. That’s clarifying about the actual value proposition of “answer engines.” Perplexity cannot generate actual information on its own and relies instead on third parties whose policies it abuses. The “answer engine” was developed by people who feel free to lie whenever it is more convenient, and that preference is necessary for how Perplexity works.

So that’s Perplexity’s real innovation here: shattering the foundations of trust that built the internet. The question is if any of its users or investors care.

OTHER NEWS

8 hrs ago

Cassidy “one lap away” from Formula E title before Portland spin

8 hrs ago

Kenya Unrest: Violent Clashes Force Kenyan President Ruto to Withdraw Tax Bill| Watch

8 hrs ago

Dollar slips on black market

8 hrs ago

Germany: Lindner puts price of 49-euro ticket up for debate

8 hrs ago

Tinubu govt operating four national budgets same time – Peter Obi alleges

8 hrs ago

Estonia's ruling party nominates the climate minister as the new PM

8 hrs ago

Paris Airbnb goldrush ends as Olympics approach

8 hrs ago

Can NJOY Help Propel Altria Group Stock Higher?

9 hrs ago

What is natto? Just like durian, stinky tofu, the sticky soybean dish is loved or hated

9 hrs ago

POOR ENGLAND DRAW WITH DENMARK! | England 1-1 Denmark | HIGHLIGHTS

9 hrs ago

Missing Wimbledon would not have been 'correct', says Djokovic

9 hrs ago

Do Lakers feel obligated to sign Klay Thompson to retain LeBron James?

9 hrs ago

T20 World Cup final: India opt to bat first vs South Africa

9 hrs ago

What If Every Satellite Fell to Earth?

9 hrs ago

What If an Asteroid Were on a Collision Course to Hit Earth?

9 hrs ago

Einstein failed to solve the Universe. Here’s what it would take to succeed. | Michio Kaku

9 hrs ago

What If We Could See Through a Black Hole?

10 hrs ago

Imo guber: New political front emerges from Owerri zone

10 hrs ago

Fred Omondi: Video emerges of comedian's final resting place well cemented, coloured

10 hrs ago

William Ruto says Gen z protesters who burnt parliament to be hunted down: "Hawawezi Kuhepa"

10 hrs ago

THINGS YOU SHOULD EXPECT WHEN DATING A STRONG WOMAN

10 hrs ago

Russian missile attack on Ukrainian town kills 7, including 2 children

10 hrs ago

Fiery Fun: Crafting a Firefighter Birthday Cake

11 hrs ago

Why The United States Has Two Carolinas: North Carolina And South Carolina

11 hrs ago

Euro 2024: Switzerland beat Italy, qualify for quarterfinals

11 hrs ago

PSD pushes for tax exemption for people earning less than Rwf100,000 a month

11 hrs ago

Portland E-Prix: Evans grabs pole, Formula E points leader Cassidy 11th

12 hrs ago

NBA-James to opt out of contract, eyes new Lakers deal - reports

12 hrs ago

UN, Taliban talks: Why are Afghan women not invited?

12 hrs ago

McLaren's Piastri protest into F1 track limits rejected as “inadmissible”

12 hrs ago

Kiss 5% Savings Account Rates Goodbye When the Fed Cuts Rates

12 hrs ago

Raila to Ruto: Kenyans who stormed Parliament are not mad listen to them

12 hrs ago

Estonia: PM successor picked as Kallas heads to Brussels

12 hrs ago

Is Rivian the Best Electric Vehicle (EV) Stock for You?

12 hrs ago

Far right hopes to make history in snap French poll

13 hrs ago

Germany v Denmark game temporarily suspended over adverse weather

13 hrs ago

Euro 2024: It’s unacceptable – Donnarumma reacts as Italy are eliminated

13 hrs ago

Spotted: Watch the New Porsche 911 GT3 Get Sideways on the Nürburgring

13 hrs ago

Is Hims & Hers Stock a Buy After Short Report?

13 hrs ago

Euro 2024: Defending champions Italy sent packing