Patreon Just Put AI Scrapers on Notice, And It’s About Time

Patreon is slamming the door on AI scrapers. Here’s why their new partnership with Cloudflare is a massive win for creator consent and compensation.

The internet has been feeling like a giant, open-air buffet where AI companies have been gorging themselves on creators’ work without paying the bill. They scrape, they train, and they profit- all while the people who actually wrote the words or painted the art get a big, fat zero for their trouble.

The tide is finally starting to turn.

Patreon just made a massive, unapologetic statement: they are partnering with Cloudflare to block AI training crawlers at the network level. And CEO Jack Conte didn’t mince words, declaring, “If that’s not on the table [credit, compensation, and consent], the crawlers can stay the f*** off Patreon.”

It’s refreshing, honestly. For too long, the narrative has been that creators should be grateful for the exposure AI provides, even if that exposure comes at the cost of their own obsolescence.

By drawing this line in the sand, Patreon isn’t just protecting its servers; it’s attempting to redefine the social contract of the web. They’re distinguishing between the good bots- the search engines that actually help you get discovered- and the bad ones that are just vacuuming up human creativity to replace it with a synthetic clone.

Is this the silver bullet? Probably not.

Tech-savvy pirates and scrapers look for backdoors. But this isn’t just about technical perfection but also signaling. By making this a default, enterprise-level stance, Patreon is forcing a shift from a free-for-all internet to one where consent is a prerequisite.

The age of the uncompensated scrape is getting a lot bumpier, and frankly? It’s about time. We’re finally seeing that free access to the world’s labor was never a natural law- it was just a lack of proper boundaries.

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