Half the Internet Is Now Written by AI

AI Writing Half The Web

According to a new report from SEO firm Graphite, AI systems are already responsible for roughly half the articles published online. Axios’s Megan Morrone reported that researchers analyzed millions of pages from Common Crawl and found that automated writing tools are shaping an ever-larger share of what we read. The specific numbers are debatable, but the direction of travel is clear.

AI-generated content is expanding fast. Spellcheck, predictive text, and grammar correction have been incorporated into our writing tools for decades. LLMs and reasoning engines are the next evolutionary step. Now that AI platforms can summarize data, generate drafts, and verify facts, there is little reason for a human to perform every step of routine content creation.

Many don’t realize that some classes of material have been automated for years: earnings summaries, weather reports, sports results, real estate listings, and just about everything else that is data-driven. Corporate blogs and e-commerce product descriptions are increasingly written by AI, then lightly edited for tone or compliance.

Now the question is scale. As generative systems connect to live data and agentic systems mature, entire categories of “human” creative output will become machine-authored. Scores, game summaries, product reviews, and local news will soon be produced entirely by AI. The economics are unavoidable. The cost of generating this kind of content is approaching zero. I truly believe that we are less than three years away from all content being free.

The web is being flooded with low-cost, low-value information. This is a huge opportunity for savvy creators. Trust, voice, and community will matter more than volume. AI slop and workslop (its close commercial cousin) can’t be stopped, but leveraging new technology to achieve business outcomes will always be a winning strategy.

Author’s note: This is not a sponsored post. I am the author of this article and it expresses my own opinions. I am not, nor is my company, receiving compensation for it. This work was created with the assistance of various generative AI models.

About Shelly Palmer

Shelly Palmer is the Professor of Advanced Media in Residence at Syracuse University’s S.I. Newhouse School of Public Communications and CEO of The Palmer Group, a consulting practice that helps Fortune 500 companies with technology, media and marketing. Named LinkedIn’s “Top Voice in Technology,” he covers tech and business for Good Day New York, is a regular commentator on CNN and writes a popular daily business blog. He's a bestselling author, and the creator of the popular, free online course, Generative AI for Execs. Follow @shellypalmer or visit shellypalmer.com.

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