Cloudflare CEO Matthew Prince says bots now generate more web traffic than humans, marking a fundamental shift in how the internet will likely operate for the foreseeable future.
In an X post on Wednesday, Prince said this change arrived about a year ahead of his own forecast, which had AI‑driven traffic overtaking people in 2027. But bot requests now account for roughly 57% of HTML page loads on sites that run on Cloudflare’s network.
“Welp, that happened faster than I predicted,” Prince wrote.
The company measures this by analyzing HTTP requests to web pages and classifying them as either human or automated, rather than by total data transferred or time spent online. Prince links the increase to “agentic” AI systems that can browse websites, click on links, and gather data on their own. These agents include AI search assistants, workflow bots, and other tools that constantly fetch and process live web content.
Security firms report a sharp jump in this kind of traffic over just last year. That growth creates new challenges for site operators, who now see inflated page‑view numbers and higher bandwidth and infrastructure costs driven by non‑human traffic.
Cloudflare has argued that older bot‑detection methods no longer work very well as AI agents imitate human browsing patterns and hide behind privacy tools. The company has already clashed with some AI companies over web scraping practices.
Now, Prince is calling for new rules and technical standards so websites can more reliably identify AI agents and enforce rules governing how these agents access and reuse online content.

