Using AI, scammers are creating frustrating - and expensive - problems for makers. Here's how to spot AI-generated patterns - and why anyone who relies on downloaded instructions should pay attention.
Like most people, I use the internet to look for inspiration for my hobbies, like cooking, baking, crochet, lettering etc. AI scammers and AI slop are killing my enthusiasm though. I'm using too much time and energy to sift though all the crap in order to find some gems.
What I need is some place to collect and curate trustworthy websites and do a websearch in those sites instead of the whole web whenever I need a recipe or are looking for my next fiber project. Does anybody have ideas or tips how to pull that of?
A huge blocklist of manually curated sites (1000+) that contain AI generated content, for the purposes of cleaning image search engines (Google Search, DuckDuckGo, and Bing) with uBlock Origin or uBlacklist.
Also works on mobile (iOS, iPadOS, Android) via uBlacklist, as well as pihole/adguard (via Hosts file)
That is not so outragious, actually! My mother was also a crafty type and I inherited a ton of books and copies when she died. They are patiently waiting somewhere in my hobby room, since it is so easy to search on the net. Since every decade is becoming trendy again at a certain point in time, this is a treasure trove waiting to be discovered. I mean, I have a whole series of recipe booklets and crochet patterns from the 70s!
I have learned to appreciate a good index.
You can literally tell the good books from the bad ones by how useful the index is I swear.
Also when I want to be able to search them as long it's scanned right and I've got a digital copy I can do Ctrl+F.
Its annoying cause I do have to know I have what I'm looking for and what book it might be in but that's why we have brains I guess.
I have an insane book from the 1950s for how to properly cater and set every possible meal time from summer tea to like fall bonfires but its less about recipes and more about presentation.
This. I've started my collection buying books at estate sales. Dirt cheap and likely from an era where you probably had to be credible to publish something in a bound volume on actual paper.
There's gotta be a series about this. Only "The Old Ones" that can operate something that's not an iDevice, the only ones left who can handwrite and don't use AI for every question they ever had. The only ones with books because everyone else threw them out and burned them. Would be interesting but we are living it right now so maybe no need.
The point of my doing hobbies is to distract me from how much I dislike interacting with other people, that and developing skills to necessary to work around the hindrances companies (ran by other people) are introducing into practically every product and service I use.
Sorry, no specific tips. Maybe there's a browser plug-in that makes it easy to whitelist websites in a search? I would pay for a search engine where actual human people regularly vet the websites included in it for factual information and unlabeled AI use.
I hadn't looked into Kagi, as I only learned about it after I had started using Ecosia.
I just glanced through the info page, they let you customize your search results, and it seems like they do some curation of the results too. But they are also getting in on the AI search band wagon.
You can setup your adblocker to block search results from websites you blacklist with a little bit of work and an understanding of CSS selectors. I cooked up a custom extension to give me a button on each search result to add it to the list.
I still get countless garbage results though and haven’t added to the list in a few months. The internet will just be partially broken until there’s a way to reliably index ai slop sites.
Firefox has an addon called uBlacklist it allows you to delete bad sites from your searches. Not sure if any other browsers have something like this.
Your local Public Library is a great, free, resource. Not just for the materials that you can borrow, but may have groups or activities that meet there.