Cloudflare has replaced its blanket bot-blocking switch with a three-tier system: Search, Agent, and Training. While search indexers remain permitted, bots that scrape content for model training or real-time user assistance will face network-level blocks on any domain displaying ads. These new defaults apply automatically to all free-tier customers and any new sites onboarded to the platform. By shifting the control from advisory robots.txt files to active network blocks, the company is effectively ending the era of free, unlimited scraping for AI developers.
Cloudflare sets hard limits on AI crawlers
Starting September 15, Cloudflare will block AI training and real-time agent crawlers by default on ad-supported websites. The move forces a shift in how automated systems access the open web, moving away from the assumption of free, unrestricted scraping toward a landscape of negotiated, paid access.

Access and the cost of content
The industry faces a significant technical hurdle regarding Googlebot, which currently conflates search and training functions. Blocking training bots effectively blinds the site to Google’s search index, a trade-off that publishers must weigh carefully. CEO Matthew Prince suggests this friction is intentional, pressuring AI companies to separate their search indexing from their data-harvesting operations. As the open web begins to itemize its costs, the model for AI access is shifting toward direct compensation, with platforms like Ceramic.ai and You.com already exploring per-use payment structures for proprietary content. For developers, the message is clear: those who do not secure negotiated access before the September deadline risk having their agents silenced by 403 errors.




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