Dead Internet Theory – Is the Internet still ‘alive’?
The Dead Internet Theory holds that much of what we encounter online, including content, comments and engagement, is no longer generated by humans. It’s a claim that edges into conspiracy, but it reflects something real.
Bots and AI tools are flooding the web with synthetic activity.
Some studies estimate that bots account for up to 50% of all internet traffic. During Elon Musk’s acquisition of Twitter in 2022, estimates suggested that between 5% and 30% of accounts on the platform were not human. The numbers are disputed, but the direction of travel isn’t.
AI-generated content is spreading across blog posts, product reviews and social replies, and it’s becoming harder to distinguish from human-produced work. Platforms continue to reward whatever drives engagement, regardless of origin. A quieter risk is emerging alongside this: AI systems being trained on content produced by other AIs, creating feedback loops that erode originality and distort meaning over time.
For brands, this matters. If trust and authenticity are harder for users to locate online, the design of genuine interaction becomes more important, not less. The question isn’t just how to be visible, but how to be credible in an environment where credibility is increasingly scarce.
The internet is not dead. But parts of it are becoming less human, and that shift is worth designing for.