In May 2025, Cloudflare CEO Matthew Prince said what many publishers and content creators have quietly feared about zer0-click ai:
“Six months ago, OpenAI was making 250 scrapes for every one visitor. Today, it’s 1,500. Visitors aren’t seeing ads. They’re not subscribing. It’s going to be much, much harder to be a content creator.”
He’s right — the rise of zero-click AI answers is changing everything.
Tools like ChatGPT, Perplexity, and Google’s AI Overviews are giving users what they want without ever sending them to the source. As a result, creators are losing visibility, publishers are losing revenue, and the old business model of the web — built on traffic and conversions — is quietly unraveling.
But it doesn’t have to stay that way.
Let’s be real: most digital publishers have struggled for years to make subscriptions work.
At the same time, ad revenue depends on pageviews and user behavior. But if users are getting their answers from AI-generated summaries, they’re not clicking through, not seeing ads, and not signing up.
AI didn’t cause this problem — but it’s accelerating it.
Cloudflare, which routes traffic for over 20% of the internet, sees the trend clearly: AI bots are making up to 1,500 scrape requests for every one real visitor.
That means:
Publishers aren’t losing traffic overnight, but the compounding effect is clear. Zero-click answers are slowly siphoning off opportunities for engagement, monetization, and reader relationships.
There’s growing pushback from creators and copyright holders:
But litigation takes years. Meanwhile, scraping continues — and publishers are still left unpaid.
The most forward-thinking publishers aren’t waiting for the courts.
These are important moves, but they only serve the top tier. What about:
That’s where we believe the next evolution of content monetization begins — and where Content Credits comes in.
Content Credits is a platform for metering and monetizing access to content — by both humans and machines.
We’ve already built the first piece: a micropayment system that lets readers pay per article, tip writers, and bypass paywalls without a subscription.
We’re now working on the next layer: tools that help publishers track AI scraping and offer paid access to AI companies through structured licensing — all managed through a single API.
Instead of:
“Pay $20/month or leave,”
We enable:
“Pay $0.25 to read this article. Or tip. Or share.”
And soon:
“If an AI model wants access — it pays too.”
This model:
To bring readers back to publisher sites — and make engagement visible again — we’re launching a browser extension that adds a universal comment layer to any page on the web.
It works like BugHerd:
This makes it easy for users to interact without jumping platforms — and helps publishers reclaim visibility without sacrificing control.
AI platforms don’t just need The New York Times or Reuters. They need:
This “long tail” of the internet is being scraped. But no one is getting paid for it — yet.
We believe it’s time to change that.
This week, we’re heading to SubSummit 2025 with nine meetings scheduled with leading publishers across North and South America.
We’re showing them how Content Credits can:
We’re not just pitching a new product — we’re building a movement to restore balance between creators and platforms.
The internet doesn’t need to be free. It needs to be fair.
Zero-click AI isn’t going away. But with the right tools, publishers don’t have to lose.
If you’re a content creator, publisher, academic, or AI company — we want to work with you.
Let’s make the internet sustainable again.
Visit contentcredits.com Let’s talk. Let’s build. Let’s fix this — together.