this post was submitted on 19 Jul 2025
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Around the beginning of last year, Matthew Prince started receiving worried calls from the bosses of big media companies. They told Mr Prince, whose firm, Cloudflare, provides security infrastructure to about a fifth of the web, that they faced a grave new online threat. “I said, ‘What, is it the North Koreans?’,” he recalls. “And they said, ‘No. It’s AI’.”

Those executives had spotted the early signs of a trend that has since become clear: artificial intelligence is transforming the way that people navigate the web. As users pose their queries to chatbots rather than conventional search engines, they are given answers, rather than links to follow. The result is that “content” publishers, from news providers and online forums to reference sites such as Wikipedia, are seeing alarming drops in their traffic.

As AI changes how people browse, it is altering the economic bargain at the heart of the internet. Human traffic has long been monetised using online advertising; now that traffic is drying up. Content producers are urgently trying to find new ways to make AI companies pay them for information. If they cannot, the open web may evolve into something very different.

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[–] JoMiran@lemmy.ml 11 points 4 days ago (1 children)

I fully expect the return and rise of curated micro-webs full of paid human created content. Less quantity, higher quality.

Just look at This Week In Videogames. The only reason it exists is to bring back "the OG" gaming publication experience. There are others starting to go this route too, like 404 Media.

[–] fckreddit@lemmy.ml 7 points 4 days ago

So we might be able to go back to internet of the 90s? Honestly, that might be for the best, imo. Small blogs, forums and maybe fediverse. Screw internet that is essentially a few monolithic silos that are now just full of crap.