Free NewsletterPro Login

Cloudflare CEO Says Bots Just Passed Humans Online

Published Jun 7, 2026
Share:
A network server room with multiple glowing data cables connected to racks, illustrating high-speed digital data transfer.

Bots just pulled ahead of humans online, and the shift came a full year before the industry expected.

Cloudflare CEO Matthew Prince shared the milestone this week, saying agentic traffic has already overtaken human traffic across the open internet.

The Crossover Came Early

Agentic traffic is exactly what it sounds like - AI agents that browse the web on behalf of a person.

These agents book flights, pull prices, and read articles, visiting the page so the human doesn't have to.

Tools like ChatGPT, Perplexity, and Claude now send bots across the web in huge numbers, with each user query sometimes triggering thousands of page visits in the background.

That volume is why Prince had pegged 2027 as the year bots would outnumber people on the open internet, only for the line to get crossed in 2026 instead.

That early arrival is exactly why Cloudflare has built much of this year's product plans around the agentic shift.

Market Briefs breaks down what shifts like this actually mean for your money - every morning in five minutes, plus a free investing masterclass when you sign up.

Why Cloudflare Sees It First

Cloudflare sits at the front door of a huge slice of the internet, handling traffic for roughly one in five websites worldwide.

Their job is sorting real visitors from bots and deciding what gets through, which puts them in a rare position to see the bot-versus-human split before almost anyone else.

Not all of that bot traffic is the same - some is harmful, some is helpful, and a growing share is the new agentic kind that acts on a person's behalf.

For years Cloudflare's main job was blocking attacks, but the work now includes deciding which AI agents get to read which websites and on whose terms.

The company rolled out a pay-per-crawl system last year that lets publishers charge AI bots for access, turning every page view into a potential payment.

That gives Cloudflare an early seat at the table for the most basic question on the new internet: who pays whom when a bot shows up.

What To Watch

The web wasn't built for AI agents - it was built for people who click, scroll, and see ads.

If the next billion visitors to a site are bots that skip the ads and skim the content, the math behind the whole ad-supported internet starts to break down.

News publishers are already feeling the squeeze, with traffic from Google search falling as AI summaries answer questions directly without sending users to the source.

For investors, the shift changes the playing field for any company that depends on web traffic, from ad-supported media to online stores that rely on shoppers actually clicking on product pages.

That gives subscription apps and logged-in services a likely edge over the open web, since real human attention is easier to spot behind a paywall.

Either way, the clock on figuring out what comes next just moved up a year.

If you want this kind of read on the market every morning, join 350,000+ investors reading Market Briefs - you also get a 45-minute investing masterclass thrown in as a bonus.

Disclosure

Get Market Briefs delivered to your inbox every morning for free!

No fluff. No noise. No politics. Just finance news you can read in 5 minutes.

Blogs

May 30, 2026
Financial Literacy Books That Actually Build Wealth
  • The best financial literacy books don't just teach budgeting, they shift how you think about money.
  • Two classics stand out: The Intelligent Investor for valuing investments, and Rich Dad Poor Dad for the owner's mindset.
  • Reading is only step one. The real wealth comes from acting on what you learn.
Read More
May 30, 2026
What Is a Roth Conversion? A Simple Guide
  • A Roth conversion moves money from a traditional retirement account into a Roth account.
  • You pay taxes on the money now, in exchange for tax-free growth and withdrawals later.
  • It can pay off if you expect higher taxes or more income in the future, but the timing and tax hit matter a lot.
Read More
May 30, 2026
Trailing Stop Loss: How to Protect Your Gains
  • A trailing stop loss is an order that automatically sells a stock if it falls a set percentage from its recent high.
  • As the stock rises, the sell point rises with it, locking in gains while capping losses.
  • It's most useful for active strategies like momentum investing, not for long-term buy-and-hold.
Read More
May 30, 2026
5 Types of Wealth: Why Money Is Only One of Them
  • Real wealth is more than a bank balance. It spans your finances, health, mind, purpose, and freedom.
  • Money is powerful, but it amplifies the life you already have rather than fixing a broken one.
  • True financial wealth means your cash flow covers your expenses, so your money works while you live.
Read More
May 30, 2026
How to Invest in Private Equity: A Beginner's Guide
  • Private equity means investing in companies that aren't listed on the stock market.
  • Traditional private equity is built for experienced, high-net-worth investors with large amounts to invest.
  • New rules have opened more accessible paths, like startup crowdfunding and real estate deals, often starting around $100.
Read More
May 30, 2026
What Is a Call Option? A Simple Guide With Examples
  • A call option gives you the right to buy a stock at a set price by a set date.
  • Investors buy calls when they expect a stock to rise, using less money than buying the shares outright.
  • The most you can lose buying a call is the premium, but time works against you, so it's an advanced tool.
Read More
May 30, 2026
EBITDA Formula: How to Calculate It Step by Step
  • EBITDA stands for Earnings Before Interest, Taxes, Depreciation, and Amortization, a measure of a company's core profit.
  • The formula adds those four items back to net income to show what the underlying business earns.
  • Investors use EBITDA to compare companies and to judge how many times earnings a stock is selling for.
Read More
May 30, 2026
What Is a Stock Option? A Plain-English Guide
  • A stock option is a contract giving you the right, but not the obligation, to buy or sell a stock at a set price by a set date.
  • There are two types: calls (the right to buy) and puts (the right to sell).
  • Options are powerful but risky, so they suit investors who already have the basics down.
Read More
May 30, 2026
Put Option: What It Is and How It Works
  • A put option gives you the right to sell a stock at a set price by a set date.
  • Investors use puts to bet a stock will fall, or as insurance to protect shares they own.
  • The most you can lose buying a put is the premium you paid, which makes it a defined-risk tool.
Read More
May 30, 2026
Operating Margin: What It Is and How to Calculate It
  • Operating margin shows how much profit a company keeps from its core business after paying its running costs.
  • The formula is operating income divided by revenue, shown as a percent.
  • A strong, steady operating margin signals a well-run business that controls its costs.
Read More
1 2 3 22
Share via
Copy link