I think ultimately, this is one of the natural effects of an industry that has become far too accustomed to releasing stuff half baked, in the hopes of iterating on it rapidly. There are cases where that is indeed an optimal approach, but it's not an existential truism across the board.
Joseph 'zeruch' Arruda
New: Researchers have quantified how easy AI search is to manipulate. Just 13 words buried in a random Reddit comment can poison AI search results. They suggest this is not easy to stop: "The way you can attack these systems is so much dumber than you think it is"
www.404media.co/it-is-trivia...
"We show that a tiny snippet—just 13 words—of retrieved text on a UGC website like Reddit, Wikipedia, Quora, or Facebook can change AI agents to output spam / scam content pretty consistently."