Cloudflare CEO Warns Of The Danger Of AI To Content Creators

Cloudflare´s Matthew Prince says Artificial Intelligence threatens online content creators´ livelihoods and urges them to protect and monetise their original work.

Matthew Prince, CEO of Cloudflare, has issued a cautionary message to digital content creators about the disruptive impact of Artificial Intelligence on the traditional web economy. In a recent CNBC interview, Prince stated that the rapid rise of Artificial Intelligence-driven tools is changing the way people access and consume information online, often at the expense of those who produce original content.

Prince highlighted that search engines and Artificial Intelligence-powered platforms increasingly bypass original creators by providing direct answers to users, effectively cutting out websites and their owners from the traffic and revenue stream. He noted, ´The way people consume information online is changing drastically. Instead of visiting websites, users receive answers directly where they search — which cuts creators out of the loop.´ He explained that the engines powering Artificial Intelligence depend on original work, urging creators to assert greater control, whether by blocking Artificial Intelligence crawlers or demanding compensation for their content.

Despite his concerns about the risks, Prince is not opposed to Artificial Intelligence itself. He sees a future where Artificial Intelligence augments rather than replaces human abilities, describing it as giving people ´superpowers´ at work. At Cloudflare, Prince emphasized that Artificial Intelligence is used to support staff, not to supplant them. However, he stressed that creators must adapt by safeguarding their work and developing sustainable monetisation strategies, warning that only those who maintain originality and assert control over their content will thrive in the evolving digital landscape. ´The value of genuine, original work will rise — but only if creators safeguard it and find sustainable ways to monetise it,´ Prince concluded, as the broader debate around Artificial Intelligence, copyright, and online compensation intensifies.

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