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WordPress Wants to Turn My Old Blog Into an AI Zombie, and It Breaks My Heart

As Tumblr and WordPress prepare to serve their content up as training material for AI, it feels like the spirit of the blog-era internet is dying.

By Chandra Steele
February 29, 2024
illustration of ghost coming out of computer (Credit: Nadia Bormotova/Getty Images)

I used to have a blog. It was called We Made a Blog. If that name sounds very 2009, that’s because it was. It lasted a few years, and after that, I didn’t think about it too often. But lately, as posting platform after posting platform disappoints us, it’s on my mind a lot. Especially now, with the news that Tumblr and WordPress are about to sell user data to OpenAI and Midjourney to train AI tools. My dead blog will be turned into an AI zombie and I’m grappling with how I feel about it while also mourning the loss of a vibrant, collective internet. 

Much has been made lately about the death of the internet, particularly the places we all posted. Facebook was long ago lost to political rantings and conspiracy theorists. Instagram is a feed of no one you asked to follow. X has been taken over by Nazis, and because Substack also welcomed Nazis, people have fled there too. As if that wasn't bad enough, now every word of Reddit will be used to train AI.

"There is a sense that I’ll just be yelling into a void. There are no places online that connect us all anymore."

One thing that has not died, though, is the desire for those of us who are terminal posters to share our thoughts somewhere. And that’s why I, and a lot of others I know, have been thinking about getting back to blogging. While I get to write about plenty of what interests me at PCMag, there are things I want to share that just don’t belong here. When I stopped blogging, those things typically found a home on social media platforms like Twitter—but now that the site has devolved into X, it’s not a place that I want to support. 

So as the number of suitable homes for my posts continues to shrink, I've been slowly filling up my Notes app with ideas. Yet as excited as I get when I plan out posts, there is a sense that I’ll just be yelling into a void. There are no places online that connect us all anymore. We have been siloed so many times over that some of us are only speaking to ourselves or, worse, AI that has been trained on us. 

screenshot of a blog post from We Made a Blog
When I made a blog, I did not know I would be training AI (Credit: We Made a Blog)

This is why the Tumblr and WordPress news seems like a heavy blow to a shared internet. It’s taken away the possibility to return to the purer place we came from. PCMag Security Analyst Kim Key reached out to Automattic, which owns both platforms, and the company did not confirm or deny the rumors, though it did direct her to a statement that seems to indicate that if the deal goes through, users will be able to opt out from having their work included in AI training. 

"In the heyday of blogging, the internet seemed at once immensely vast but also incredibly close. This is no longer the world we live in, offline or online."

Nevertheless, the language in it is vague enough and too AI-friendly to make me (and likely many others) use WordPress to set up the blog I've been dreaming of. This latest loss, coming on the heels of those others, feels like the biggest blow of all, maybe because the two sites are how so many of us started. 

In the heyday of blogging, the internet seemed at once immensely vast but also incredibly close. It was a neighborhood where you could walk over and chat with anyone about obscure shared interests or discover something entirely new that would consume you. This is no longer the world we live in, offline or online. 

Because I no longer have the logins to Tumblr or WordPress, though, I guess a form of me will continue on in AI that, due to being trained on my old blog posts, will remember baking bread in Brooklyn, has things to say about Basquiat on a sticky summer day, and knows what it’s like to spend a fall day at MoMA looking at chairs. In the death of the internet, we’re all just ghosts in the machine.

@kim.key Data cleanup with me! After 404Media reported that Tumblr and Wordpress are selling user data to AI companies, I deleted my accounts to “opt out”. You can too! https://www.404media.co/tumblr-and-wordpress-to-sell-users-data-to-train-ai-tools/ #pcmag #tumblr #ai #technology #404media #wordpress #ainews ♬ original sound - Kim Key

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About Chandra Steele

Senior Features Writer

My title is Senior Features Writer, which is a license to write about absolutely anything if I can connect it to technology (I can). I’ve been at PCMag since 2011 and have covered the surveillance state, vaccination cards, ghost guns, voting, ISIS, art, fashion, film, design, gender bias, and more. You might have seen me on TV talking about these topics or heard me on your commute home on the radio or a podcast. Or maybe you’ve just seen my Bernie meme

I strive to explain topics that you might come across in the news but not fully understand, such as NFTs and meme stocks. I’ve had the pleasure of talking tech with Jeff Goldblum, Ang Lee, and other celebrities who have brought a different perspective to it. I put great care into writing gift guides and am always touched by the notes I get from people who’ve used them to choose presents that have been well-received. Though I love that I get to write about the tech industry every day, it’s touched by gender, racial, and socioeconomic inequality and I try to bring these topics to light. 

Outside of PCMag, I write fiction, poetry, humor, and essays on culture.

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