30 August 2025

(AI) bots eat 30% of the web bandwidth

 One of the hidden costs of AI is the hunt for training data by ripping content from websites. 

The bots are massively using content from websites without paying for it, ignoring any copyright that may be associated to that content. They are even using AI to find content that is hidden behind JavaScript logic.

AI providers often argue that they refer to their sources and that this leads to more visists to those websites. Cloudflare, a major CDN provider, has shown that often the referrals are very low compared to the bot traffic, OpenAI being the worst with 1 referral for 1600 crawls:

 

Cloudflare is now preparing a service to install a payment wall for crawling. 

Not only are the AI bots not paying for the content they are sucking from the content providers. Again according to Cloadflare, they represent 30% of the traffic going to these websites. And who is paying for the consumed bandwidth?Indeed, the content providers themselves are paying for the bandwidth their servers need.

17 August 2025

The real cost of AI

Last year OpenAI lost $8 billion and Anthrophic lost $3 billion.

Cursor and Claude code have multplied the cost of their monthly subscriptions by 10, now at about $200.

Even wit this price tag, the increased productivity is still worth it in most cases, but it is not a free ride anymore.

Companies might have to do a thorough cost benefit analysis on their AI expenses. 

Some researchers even think we have reached the limits of the current AI techniques, while the AI industry claims Artificial General Intelligence (AI at or surpassing the level of human intelligence) is nigh. 

13 August 2025

AI and copyright

AI generated content can infringe copyrights, but what about copyrighting content that you generated with AI?

AI generated content (text, images...) cannot be copyrighted as there is no human to give the credit to. It can be trademarked though.

 

more... 

 

6 August 2025

 1 (4/\/"7 |_|/\/[)3|2574/\/[) '/0|_||2 \/\/|2171/\/9. 17’5 (0/\/|=|_|51/\/9.

 

 

I  CAN'T UNDERSTAND YOUR WRITING. IT'S CONFUSING

18 May 2025

Compose mulmtiplatform now stable on IOS

With release 1.8 compose multiplatform is now moving IOS from beta to stable. Web support is moving from alpha to beta.

Stable platforms now include  

  • mobile
    • Android
    • iOS
  • desktop
    • OS
      • windows
      • MacOs
      • Linux
    • processor: 64bit
      • x86
      • arm
  • web (beta)

23 April 2025

IntelliJ IDEA 2025.1 release highlights

Most remarkable features for me in this release:

  • kotlin notebook
  • you can now partially display intellij's classic main menu, which is otherwise hidden under the hambnurger button. This will certainly help people find some feartures. But I've gotten used to the hidden menu by now, and I like my main options like projects drop down to be at the same place all the time, so I don't think I will use this.
  • Uses OS default file browser, rahter than IntelliJ's. It is annoying however that it is always opening in my home diretory, rather than remembering the same location as IntelliJ's. Also, in IntelliJ's browser, it was easier to go to the map of another project bu selecting that project and navigating from there.
    I switched back to IntelliJ's file browser using: Settings | Advanced Settings | Use native file chooser dialog in Windows/macOS. It just started to refresh a bit faster these last relases, so this is the best option for me.
  •  Automatic creation of Sring Data repositories
  • Better WSL support
  •  Gradle
    • Easier setting of JDK for Gradle, hopefully getting rid of daemon warnings that it is using a different JVM
    • Automatic download of library sources upon source code access 
  • Preconfiguration of Qodana security analysis

22 April 2025

Using AI to write hacking code from CVE exploit publication

AI can help hackers to quickly write exploit code from published security problems.

Here's an interesting report of the journey to generate hacking code using AI. 

The engineer generated the initial code using chapGpt. The code did not work, then he fixed it with Cursor and Claude Sonnet.

The impleciation is that security administrators now even have a shorter time to install patches, as the hackers can generate the attacks in no time.