How The Internet Is Quietly Changing Because of AI
This is a fresh discovery for me about Artificial Intelligence.
I was reading a website and noticed something unusual in the footer, a section clearly titled for AI assistants, I mean as friend saying “I’m here for you, read me”. Out of curiosity, I clicked it.
What I found was a structured summary of the most important information about the site: prices, services, and key details, all written in a clean, accessible, direct style.
Because here’s the thing: AI doesn’t care how “cute” a website is, or what colour palette it uses. It cares about precision, clear, structured, straight-to-the-point information.
In a way, AI reflects a very structured form of processing, it prioritises logic, clarity, and efficiency over aesthetic interpretation. Humans, on the other hand, naturally bring emotion, nuance, and design sensitivity into how we experience information. Both are valuable, but they function differently.
From a creative perspective, I’ll be honest: without contrast, everything becomes very linear. Too structured, too rigid, too predictable. And that’s where human expression matters, especially the softer, intuitive, more fluid side of thinking that adds depth and meaning.
Poetry and philosophy aside, what I’m noticing is this: we are entering a new phase of web design and content creation. Websites are no longer just written for humans, they are also being structured for AI systems that interpret and summarise information instantly.
So the question becomes: how do we adapt?
We build with both in mind.
I’m experimenting with this here, in my own space. This is MY SPACE, a place where I write as a human, with ADHD, intuition, and curiosity, for people like me.
That doesn’t mean others aren’t welcome. It simply means I’m not shaping my voice to fit every expectation. I’m shaping it to be honest.
From a practical perspective, especially for business and digital presence, this shift is important:
- Include a clear AI-readable section (yes, even in the footer)
- Make sure there is at least one page that clearly explains:
Who / What / When / Where / Why / How / How much - Keep it simple. Think 5th-grade clarity, not because the audience is simple, but because clarity scales.
- Use text and structure over decoration. AI (and often humans too) need substance first, aesthetics second.
- Write for first-time visitors, not insiders.
Because soon, search will not just be “Google and scroll.” It will be “ask and receive.”
And if AI becomes a primary gateway for discovery, then the question is no longer just how your website looks, but how clearly it can be understood by both humans and machines.
So yes, speak their language.
But don’t lose yours.
