The internet runs on advertising. It is the economic engine behind search, social media, news, and countless consumer services. But that engine requires human eyeballs. It needs people scrolling, clicking, and buying. AI agents do none of those things. They read data, execute tasks, and transact without ever noticing a banner ad or a sponsored link. That divergence could do more than disrupt digital advertising—it could break the entire funding model of the open web.
Erik Reppel, the Coinbase engineer behind the x402 protocol, laid out the threat in a original release interview. His argument is simple and brutal: AI agents bypass the ad system entirely. They don’t engage with sponsored content, they don’t form brand preferences the way humans do, and they don’t convert into paying customers because of a cleverly placed display unit. When agents become the dominant consumers of online content, ad metrics collapse.
This is not some distant sci-fi scenario. Already, large language models and task-focused bots are scraping websites, pulling structured data, and executing bookings or purchases without ever rendering an ad. The traffic is real, but it produces zero revenue for publishers. As agent volume grows, it will dilute human traffic analytics, break attribution models, and push cost-per-click economics into uncharted territory.
In another sign of AI’s disruptive force, a16z researchers found that AI agents are rapidly learning to reproduce DeFi exploits, proving that autonomous software is already operating outside the guardrails designed for human users. The advertising collapse is just one front in a wider machine-to-machine revolution.
Reppel’s answer to the ad apocalypse is x402, an open protocol that lets AI agents pay for access. Instead of relying on attention merchants, websites and APIs could charge fractions of a cent per request, settled instantly on-chain. It is essentially a paywall, but one that speaks the language of machines: fast, programmatic, and invisible to a human user.
This model flips the script. Today, a news site’s value is measured in impressions. Tomorrow, its value could be measured in the number of API calls agents make to its data. If a trading bot needs real-time headlines, it pays per fetch. If an AI assistant needs to verify a fact, it pays the source. The unit economics shift from CPM to a utility metering model, and that could reward quality over clickbait.
But building that infrastructure requires a payment rail that agents can use natively. That is where stablecoins become essential. Unlike credit cards, which involve human authentication and settlement delays, a USDC transaction can be initiated, confirmed, and settled by code in under a second. x402 is betting that stablecoin rails will become the default financial layer for agent-to-service interactions, and that volume could dwarf anything seen in consumer crypto today.
The ad-supported internet was already cracking. Ad fraud, bot traffic, and the slow erosion of cookie-based targeting made the system increasingly inefficient. Google and Meta captured the majority of digital ad spend, while publishers saw their share of revenue shrink. The rise of ad blockers further squeezed the model. AI agents did not create this crisis; they are accelerating an existing decay.
Marc Andreessen has argued that AI could end a 50-year productivity slowdown, but the productivity for agents doesn’t translate into advertising impressions. An agent that scans 10,000 product listings to find the best price is incredibly efficient—and utterly invisible to the ad networks that funded those listings in the first place. The economic value moves away from attention and toward data utility, and the current infrastructure is not built to capture that shift.
Privacy regulation adds another layer. As governments restrict tracking, the data that made behavioral advertising profitable becomes harder to collect. Agents that pay for access may actually offer a cleaner path: a direct transaction rather than a surveillance-based one. That could align with the privacy-first ethos that is gaining momentum, even if it means the end of “free” content.
If agents become the primary consumers of the web, the implications are structural. Entire industries—ad tech, marketing analytics, affiliate programs—would need to reinvent themselves. Platforms that rely on user-generated content, like social networks, would face an existential question: if AI agents are scraping and repackaging your feed without ever opening your app, how do you monetize?
The micropayment model is not new, but it has failed repeatedly because humans hate friction. Paying $0.003 to read an article feels annoying. An agent, however, does not care. It will happily pay a thousand micro-fees to get the data it needs, and the total cost could still be negligible. If billions of AI agents start transacting this way, the aggregate flow through crypto rails could be enormous, potentially rivaling or even surpassing human-to-human payment volumes.
Vitalik Buterin recently warned against the push for fully autonomous AI agents, citing alignment risks. If agents gain the ability to manage funds and make independent economic decisions, the micropayment layer becomes not just a billing system but a nerve center for machine-driven commerce. The security and governance of that layer will matter enormously.
Coinbase’s x402 protocol is an early bet that the web’s business model will migrate from eyeballs to API calls, and that crypto will be the settlement layer. That is a bold thesis, and it may take years to play out. But the direction is hard to ignore. Every AI agent that scrapes a website without generating an ad view is a tiny vote for a different economic arrangement.
The larger question is whether the open web can survive the transition. If only the largest platforms can afford to build agent-friendly paywalls, the internet could become even more centralized. If the protocol remains open and neutral, it could level the field by letting any publisher charge for access. The outcome will depend on who controls the standards—and whether the next generation of internet infrastructure is built on public ledgers or inside walled gardens.
<p>The post The End of Ads: Coinbase Engineer Says AI Agents Will Destroy the Web’s Business Model first appeared on Crypto News And Market Updates | BTCUSA.</p>


