Long story short, my VPS, which I’m forwarding my servers through Tailscale to, got hammered by thousands of requests per minute from Anthropic’s Claude AI. All of which being from different AWS IPs.

The VPS has a 1TB monthly cap, but it’s still kinda shitty to have huge spikes like the 13GB in just a couple of minutes today.

How do you deal with something like this?
I’m only really running a caddy reverse proxy on the VPS which forwards my home server’s services through Tailscale. "

I’d really like to avoid solutions like Cloudflare, since they f over CGNAT users very frequently and all that. Don’t think a WAF would help with this at all(?), but rate limiting on the reverse proxy might work.

(VPS has fail2ban and I’m using /etc/hosts.deny for manual blocking. There’s a WIP website on my root domain with robots.txt that should be denying AWS bots as well…)

I’m still learning and would really appreciate any suggestions.

    • Xanza@lemm.ee
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      40 minutes ago

      This is the most realistic solution. Adding a 0.5/1s PoW to hosted services isn’t gonna be a big deal for the end user, but offers a tiny bit of protection against bots, especially if the work factor is variable and escalates.

      • Possibly linux
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        20 minutes ago

        It also is practical for bots. It forces people to not abuse resources.

  • breadsmasher@lemmy.world
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    1 day ago

    Im struggling to find it, but theres like an “AI tarpit” that causes scrapers to get stuck. something like that? Im sure I saw it posted on lemmy recently. hopefully someone can link it

      • doodledup@lemmy.world
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        28 minutes ago

        I don’t quiet understand how this is deployed. Hosting this behind a dedicated subdomain or path kind of defeats the purpose as the bots are still able to access the actual website no problem.

      • _cryptagion [he/him]@lemmy.dbzer0.com
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        51 minutes ago

        If you’re looking to stop them from wasting your traffic, do not use a tarpit. The whole point of it is that it makes the scraper get stuck on your server forever. That means you pay for the traffic the scraper uses, and it will continually rack up those charges until the people running it wise up and ban your server. The question you gotta ask yourself is, who has more money, you or the massive AI corp?

        Tarpits are the dumbest bit of anti-AI tech to come out yet.

        • N0x0n@lemmy.ml
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          11 hours ago

          Now I just want to host a web page and expose it with nepenthes…

          First, because I’m a big fan of carnivorous plants.

          Second, because it let’s you poison LLMs, AI and fuck with their data.

          Lastly, because I can do my part and say F#CK Y0U to those privacy data hungry a$$holes !

          I don’t even expose anything directly to the web (always accessible through a tunnel like wireguard) or have any important data to protect from AI or LLMs. But just giving the opportunity to fuck with them while they continuously harvest data from everyone is something I was already thinking off but didn’t knew how.

          Thanks for the link !

      • A good tar pit will reduce your bandwidth. Tarpits aren’t about shoving useless data at bots; they’re about responding as slow as possible to keep the bot connected for as long as possible while giving it nothing.

        Endlessh accepts the connection and then… does nothing. It doesn’t even actually perform the SSL negotiation. It just very… slowly… sends… an endless preamble, until the bot gives up.

        As I write, my Internet-facing SSH tarpit currently has 27 clients trapped in it. A few of these have been connected for weeks. In one particular spike it had 1,378 clients trapped at once, lasting about 20 hours.

        • mholiv@lemmy.world
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          11 hours ago

          Fair. But I haven’t seen any anti-ai-scraper tarpits that do that. The ones I’ve seen mostly just pipe 10MB of /dev/urandom out there.

          Also I assume that the programmers working at ai companies are not literally mentally deficient. They certainly would add .timeout(10) or whatever to their scrapers. They probably have something more dynamic than that.

          • sem@lemmy.blahaj.zone
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            8 hours ago

            There’s one I saw that gave the bot a long circular form to fill out or something, I can’t exactly remember

          • Ah, that’s where tuning comes in. Look at the logs, take the average time-out, and tune the tarpit to return a minimum payload consisting of a minimal HTML containing a single, slightly different URL back to the tar pit. Or, better yet, JavaScript that loads a single page of tarpit URLs very slowly. Bots have to be able to run JS, or else they’re missing half the content on the web. I’m sure someone has created a JS forkbomb.

            Variety is the spice of life. AI botnet blacklists are probably the better solution for web content; you can run ssh on a different port and run a tarpit on the standard port, and it will barely affect you. But for the web, if you’re running a web server you probably want visitors, and tarpits would be harder to set up to catch only bots.

            • mholiv@lemmy.world
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              7 hours ago

              I see your point but like I think you underestimate the skill of coders. You make sure your timeout is inclusive of JavaScript run times. Maybe set a memory limit too. Like imagine you wanted to scrape the internet. You could solve all these tarpits. Any capable coder could. Now imagine a team of 20 of the best coders money can buy each paid 500.000€. They can certainly do the same.

              Like I see the appeal of running a tar pit. But like I don’t see how they can “trap” anyone but script kiddies.

              • WhyJiffie@sh.itjust.works
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                4 hours ago

                you whisky couldn’t solve tarpits completely. they may hold up the scrapers for less time, but they will still do that for the amount of the timeout

                • mholiv@lemmy.world
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                  4 hours ago

                  Maybe not with just if statements. But with a heuristic system I bet any site that runs a tar pit will be caught out very quickly.

              • Nobody is paying software developers 500.000€. It might cost the company that much, but no developers are making that much. The highest software engineer salaries are still in the US, and the average is $120k. High-end salaries are $160k; you might creep up a little more than that, but that’s also location specific. Silicon Valley salaries might be higher, but then, it costs far more to live in that area.

                In any case, the question is ROI. If you have to spend $500,000 to address some sites that are being clever about wasting your scrapers’ time, is that data worth it? Are you going to make your $500k back? And you have to keep spending it, because people keep changing tactics and putting in new mechanisms to ruin your business model. Really, the only time this sort of investment makes sense is when you’re breaking into a bank and are going to get a big pay-out in ransomware or outright theft. Getting the contents of my blog is never going to be worth the investment.

                Your assumption is that slowly served content is considered not worth scraping. If that’s the case, then it’s easy enough for people to prevent their content from being scraped: put in sufficient delays. This is an actual a method for addressing spam: add a delay in each interaction. Even relatively small delays add up and cost spammers money, especially if you run a large email service and do it at scale.

                Make the web a little slower. Add a few seconds to each request, on every web site. Humans might notice, but probably not enough to be a big bother, but the impact on data harvesters will be huge.

                If you think this isn’t the defense, consider how almost every Cloudflare interaction - and an increasingly large number of other sites - are including time-wasting front pages. They usually say something like “making sure you’re human” with a spinning disk, but really all they need to be doing is adding 10 seconds to each request. If a scraper of trying to indeed only a million pages a day, and each page adds a 10s delay, that’s wasting 2,700 hours of scraper computer time. And they’re trying to scrape far more than a million pages a day; it’s estimated (they don’t reveal the actual number) that Google indexes billions of pages every day.

                This is good, though; I’m going to go change the rate limit on my web server; maybe those genius software developers will set a timeout such that they move on before they get any content from my site.

                • mholiv@lemmy.world
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                  4 hours ago

                  When I worked in the U.S. I was well above $160k.

                  When you look at leaks you can see $500k or more for principal engineers. Look at valves lawsuit information. https://www.theverge.com/2024/7/13/24197477/valve-employs-few-hundred-people-payroll-redacted

                  Meta is paying $400k BASE for AI Reserch engineers with stock options on top which in my experience is an additional 300% - 600%. Vesting over 2 to 4 years. This is to H1B workers who traditionally are paid less.

                  Once you get to principal and staff level engineering positions compensation opens up a lot.

                  https://h1bdata.info/index.php?em=meta+platforms+inc&job=&city=&year=all+years

                  ROI does not matter when companies are telling investors that they might be first to AGI. Investors go crazy over this. At least they will until the AI bubble pops.

                  I support people resisting if they want by setting up tar pits. But it’s a hobby and isn’t really doing much.

                  The sheer amount of resources going into this is beyond what people think.

                  That and a competent engineer can probably write something on the BEAM VM that can handle a crap ton of parallel connections. 6 figure maybe? Being slow walked means low CPU use which means more green threads.

    • zoey@lemmy.librebun.comOP
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      1 day ago

      Not gonna lie, the $3900/mo at the top of the /pricing page is pretty wild.
      Searched “crowdsec docker” and they have docs and all that. Thank you very much, I’ve heard of crowdsec before, but never paid much attention, absolutely will check this out!

  • Greg Clarke@lemmy.ca
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    23 hours ago

    What are you hosting and who are your users? Do you receive any legitimate traffic from AWS or other cloud provider IP addresses? There will always be edge cases like people hosting VPN exit nodes on a VPS etc, but if its a tiny portion of your legitimate traffic I would consider blocking all incoming traffic from cloud providers and then whitelisting any that make sense like search engine crawlers if necessary.

  • WasPentalive@lemmy.one
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    22 hours ago

    Too bad you can’t post a usage notice that anything scrapped to train an AI will be charged and will owe $some-huge-money, then pepper the site with bogus facts, occasionally ask various AI about the bogus fact and use that to prove scraping and invoice the AI’s company.

  • poVoq@slrpnk.net
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    1 day ago

    It seems any somewhat easy to implement solution gets circumvented by them quickly. Some of the bots do respect robots.txt through if you explicitly add their self-reported user-agent (but they change it from time to time). This repo has a regularly updated list: https://github.com/ai-robots-txt/ai.robots.txt/

    In my experience, git forges are especially hit hard, and the only real solution I found is to put a login wall in front, which kinda sucks especially for open-source projects you want to self-host.

    Oh and recently the mlmym (old reddit) frontend for Lemmy seems to have started attracting AI scraping as well. We had to turn it off on our instance because of that.

    • zoey@lemmy.librebun.comOP
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      1 day ago

      In my experience, git forges are especially hit hard

      Is that why my Forgejo instance has been hit twice like crazy before…
      Why can’t we have nice things. Thank you!

      EDIT: Hopefully Photon doesn’t get in their sights as well. Though after using the official lemmy webui for a while, I do really like it a lot.

      • poVoq@slrpnk.net
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        1 day ago

        Yeah, Forgejo and Gitea. I think it is partially a problem of insufficient caching on the side of these git forges that makes it especially bad, but in the end that is victim blaming 🫠

        Mlmym seems to be the target because it is mostly Javascript free and therefore easier to scrape I think. But the other Lemmy frontends are also not well protected. Lemmy-ui doesn’t even allow to easily add a custom robots.txt, you have to manually overwrite it in the reverse-proxy.

    • doodledup@lemmy.world
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      59 minutes ago

      That would be extremely tedious. There are hundrets of thousands of scrapers out there.

  • solrize@lemmy.world
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    1 day ago

    Might be worth patching fail2ban to recognize the scrapers and block them in iptables.