The rules dictating what this means change over time as context changes. And this is definitely one or the largest shifts since the advent of the www.
> Absolutely not.
OK, but it seems in that case you'll have to delist from search engines and any other place where an LLM may get a preview of what a link that a human gave it is about. And there's likely a spiral here, as as you remove content references from more access points, fewer humans will come across them leading to fewer LLM-based queries, so you'll definitely get your wish. Just not the way you envisioned.
The LLM may hallucinate at times, but many including myself find the pros outweigh the cons, and will increasingly gravitate toward using such services for an increasing variety of tasks. This is the evolving state of the internet.
The rules dictating what this means change over time as context changes. And this is definitely one or the largest shifts since the advent of the www.
> Absolutely not.
OK, but it seems in that case you'll have to delist from search engines and any other place where an LLM may get a preview of what a link that a human gave it is about. And there's likely a spiral here, as as you remove content references from more access points, fewer humans will come across them leading to fewer LLM-based queries, so you'll definitely get your wish. Just not the way you envisioned.
The LLM may hallucinate at times, but many including myself find the pros outweigh the cons, and will increasingly gravitate toward using such services for an increasing variety of tasks. This is the evolving state of the internet.