The web is forking. Sara Guaglione reports that publishers are starting to build one version of their sites for humans and another for agents. The phrase that matters is Time chief operating officer Mark Howard’s “separating out that traffic.”
“[The bots are] just getting the content itself and the metadata, but they’re not getting the full page experience, and we’re routing all the humans to the full page experience. So we’re separating out that traffic,” Howard said.
“Now we’re starting to think about, as the volume of bot traffic continues to increase significantly – and we see through a number of our vendor partners that we have very high domain authority with AI bot traffic – there’s value in that,” he added.
Howard is making the operational case. Toshit Panigrahi, co-founder and CEO of TollBit, makes the economics explicit:
“Part of onboarding to TollBit is we create your agent site for you,” said Toshit Panigrahi, co-founder and CEO of TollBit. “It really comes down to the token economy. Websites have a lot of HTML tags and JavaScript and CSS and things that don’t have to do with the content. That creates a big bloat in the actual size of the page.”
Markdown can make websites “friendlier” to agents, he added. “AI can comprehend more of your article because they’re not spending money parsing out other HTML that’s on the page. We see, on average, a 90% reduction in tokens, because we have converted the content to markdown.”
That efficiency argument is real. But independent publisher consultant Scott Messer, principal of Messer Media, pushes back:
Yet, even as more publishers quietly spin up agent-friendly feeds, stripped down pages and custom schemes, not everyone is convinced they should be racing to re-architect the web for bots. Independent publisher consultant Scott Messer, principal of Messer Media, argues that building for agents should be a highly qualified decision, not the default. His reasoning: traffic isn’t the reward in an agentic environment – if there is no click, no ad impression and no check, the build is pure cost.
“If you believe there’s a value to being discovered by these bots and agents, then you should build them. If you don’t believe [that], I would ask, why would you build them?,” he said.
That is the question under all of this. The rendering layer—the HTML, CSS, and JavaScript that turn server content into pages—is exactly the surface designers build, and publishers and content creators are now deciding which parts of that surface matter when the visitor is no longer a person.
I’d argue that RSS can be easily consumed by agents too.

How Time and others are rebuilding parts of the web for AI agents
Publishers are preparing for the agentic web by creating AI-friendly versions of their sites to stay discoverable in AI search.





















