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Attention, internet users! An anonymous programmer launches Nepenthes, which will fight against bots
"Watch out, internet users!" is very 90s, isn't it?

- January 27, 2025
- Updated: July 1, 2025 at 10:30 PM

Did you still think that AI wasn’t going to affect your life? Think again. Amid a growing debate over the misuse of generative artificial intelligence and deep learning technologies, an anonymous programmer has developed an innovative tool, Nepenthes, aimed at curbing the advance of web scanning bots. Although AI has beneficial applications, such as in medical science, the proliferation of software that extracts content from the web has raised widespread concerns in the digital community.
AI is fine
Nepenthes, whose creators describe it as a “digital trap,” works by generating random links that always point back to itself. This keeps bots trapped in an endless loop, preventing access to real content. According to the programmer who goes by the name Aaron B, crawlers are not particularly intelligent: “They download a URL and, if they find links to others, they download those too”, he explains. Through this mechanism, Nepenthes can saturate valid URLs and consume resources inefficiently.
The creator of Nepenthes has expressed his frustration about the evolution of the Internet, describing it as a “money-extracting panopticon”, dominated by oligarchs who control digital discourse. With this perspective, the programmer has decided to act offensively by allowing bots to “swallow” useless information, although he also warns that the software can cause high resource consumption, which could frustrate less technical users.

Despite its intentions, some critics consider that Nepenthes is a form of malicious software, whose real effectiveness against the growing tide of bots is questionable. Aaron B states that his creation will not eliminate the demand for resources generated by these systems, but it could waste the time of some of the more intrusive ones. The discussion about the role of artificial intelligence and its ethical use remains very relevant in the technological field.
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