Patreon против ИИ-краулеров: авторы требуют согласия
Patreon заблокировала боты, загружающие контент авторов для обучения нейросетей. Глава платформы Джек Конте выступил с ясной позицией: авторы должны получать признание, плату и давать согласие перед использованием их работ в AI-тренировке. Это отражает растущий конфликт между создателями и AI-компаниями по вопросу об авторских правах.
AI-processed from 404 Media; edited by Hamidun News
Patreon blocked AI crawlers on July 10, 2026, banning bots from downloading creator content without their consent. The initiative comes from the platform's CEO Jack Conte, who made a clear demand to companies developing artificial intelligence. His position is based on three key principles: creators should receive recognition, compensation, and consent before their work is used.
Three conditions for copyright protection
Creators should receive recognition, compensation, and consent.
If that's not on the table, then crawlers should get off the platform.
This statement from Jack Conte defines Patreon's position. The platform will block access to creator content for any bots that do not meet three key conditions:
- Creators must be credited and receive recognition of authorship
- Creators must receive financial compensation for the use of their work
- Creators must give explicit written consent for their content to be used in training AI models
Why this decision makes sense
More than four hundred thousand creators and artists—writers, musicians, illustrators, podcasters—have posted their content on Patreon. The platform was founded specifically to help independent creators earn stable income from audience support. Blocking crawlers becomes a tool for protecting this ecosystem from unauthorized use of content.
How do neural network training machines work? They download texts, images, music, videos from open internet sources and use all of this as data for training AI models. Creators are not notified, they are not paid, they are not asked for consent. The patterns and style that the model learns are largely based on their creativity, but creators receive nothing in return.
War between creators and AI companies
Patreon's decision is just part of a broader conflict between content creators and companies developing artificial intelligence. Musicians are filing lawsuits against OpenAI and other companies for using their songs in model training. Writers demand compensation for their books used in datasets. Artists are outraged that generative AI systems copy their style based on analysis of their own works.
Major AI laboratories (OpenAI, Anthropic, Google DeepMind, Meta) argue that using open data for model training is fair use. Creators strongly disagree: they demand money, credit, and the right to control how their creativity is used.
What it means
Patreon's decision shows that platforms are willing to stand up for creators and actively block access to companies that do not follow the rules. This may be the beginning of a new standard in the industry. Within a year or two, obtaining creator consent before using their content in AI training may become not an exception, but a requirement. For major AI companies, this will mean either paying creators or abandoning such data sources and finding alternative ways to train their models.
*Meta is recognized as an extremist organization and is banned in the Russian Federation.
Need AI working inside your business — not just in your newsfeed?
I build production AI for companies — custom CRM, internal tools, autonomous agents, workflow automation. Owned by you, shaped to your process, no per-seat tax. Built by Zhemal Khamidun, CPO of AlpinaGPT (AI platform, 6,000+ users).
The AI world, distilled — once a week
Seven stories that actually mattered, hand-picked. No noise, no reposts, no press releases.
Done! Check your inbox for a confirmation.