Cloudflare says agentic AI bots now account for the majority of open‑web activity, with 57.4% of requests versus 42.6% for humans, marking a sharp turn in internet usage after an 7,851% annual surge in AI agent traffic. CEO Matthew Prince, who had projected bots would eclipse humans by 2027, said the tipping point arrived earlier than expected and acknowledged the underlying data are “a bit messy,” but directional.
The shift is uneven by region. North America skews most heavily toward bots (68.6%), while some subregions—such as the U.S. Midwest—remain human‑led. Outliers abound: traffic from Gibraltar peaks at up to 97% bots, while Cuba and Laos remain predominantly human. Prince distinguished “agentic” bots—AI systems browsing on users’ behalf—from long‑standing crawlers like search indexers, noting that AI visits now outnumber human visits even as humans still drive more engagement.
The rise lends new weight to the “Dead Internet” theory, as platforms report growing AI‑generated activity and content. For advertisers, publishers and security teams, the implications range from skewed analytics and bandwidth costs to ad‑fraud exposure and renewed urgency around robots.txt policies and bot mitigation.
Related articles:
Imperva 2024 Bad Bot Report
Dead Internet theory
IAB Tech Lab: ads.txt to fight ad fraud
Cloudflare Radar documentation





























