Comment by scottswilliams
4 hours ago
Agent readiness seems like an entirely helpful step. People aren't using blockchains on my websites but they are using AI, and AI do not need to use websites like humans.
Humans want to see a good-looking website, even just raw HTML. An agent doesn't even need that, ideally they would just see the content of the page in markdown.
Why not have an agent version? It saves the client agent and the website host time and money.
It would be nice if there was a standard like llms.txt to specify "agents should instead visit this mirror of the website that is a raw markdown version of what humans see"
Also, part of agent readiness on this website is the AI equivalent of SEO (or the opposite if you don't want your website being crawled for AI).
If you have an "agent ready" site, will humans even use it? Why would they visit your site if an AI can just scrape it or MCP it or whatever with a 10 foot pole, while their human sits in ChatGPT/Claude and waits for the results? You might as well just build an API or CLI instead of a website and skip the ceremony.
> Why not have an agent version?
Why have one? There are no benefits, and innumerable downsides.
> It saves the client agent and the website host time and money.
I do not care about the users' budget, if they don't want to spend a trillion dollars they can just read a website like everyone used to.
As for my own hosting budget, the AI scraper bots consume 2 or more orders of magnitude more bandwidth than the AI agents, it's utterly irrelevant to aid them.
> Also, part of agent readiness on this website is the AI equivalent of SEO
SEO is dead.
Click-through rates have crumbled. AI bots and agents don't provide ad impressions, so revenues are crashing as well.
And the flood of AI slop has made Google significantly more aggressive in "shadowbanning" anything that even remotely looks like what the AI sloppers are doing at any given moment.