It’s not technically that hard to scrape content from the most popular Discord servers. The real issue is that you can’t legally share those findings publicly on the open web because of copyright concerns.
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Personally, it happens to me quite frequently that I encounter a niche problem, Google it, and find the solution in an obscure blog from 2007.
However, for more recent content, I've found it increasingly difficult. For example, with older brute-force chess engines, I can easily search online and find abundant documentation, forum posts, and personal experiences. In contrast, for modern chess engines, like those based on neural networks, I've found it significantly harder to locate what I'm looking for through Google, because much of the technical discussion and support takes place on private Discord servers.
Moreover, I often limit my searches to specific blogs or forums, like Fedora forums or my favorite personal blogs, but this approach doesn't work when the information is confined to Discord.
Funnily enough, I'm not blaming AI by any means. Closed walled gardens are a modern problem, stemming from the decline of forums and independent blogs. AI didn't cause it; the issue already existed. In fact, you might argue that closed gardens like Discord are pissing off everyone: AI companies dislike them because they make access to training data more difficult, and members of this community dislike them because they make it harder to find human-written content online through search engines like Google.