Sorry, the Internet is really dead It seems that there really are no people left on the internet. We have new evidence of this from an unexpected source. Experts from the technology company Graphite (https://shorten.ly/YXaN7r) analyzed a random sample of 65,000 English-language articles published from January 2020 to May 2025. The analysis revealed a sharp increase in AI-generated articles following the advent of AI: from about 10% at the end of 2022 to over 40% by 2024, with the growth rate slightly slowing afterward. It appears that today, the flow of AI content has reached a plateau. After a peak in November 2024, the share of new AI articles and human-written materials has stabilized at around 50-50. As of May 2025, AI-generated articles account for 52% of new content, having overtaken human-written texts, which previously held a slight advantage in the preceding month. I have also long noticed a strange paradox - our gopher:// server is visited by lot bots. Despite using an exotic protocol, more than half of the server visitors are not humans. If they are not humans, then who or what are they? Of course, they are AI. What does this mean for us humans in practical terms? Firstly, I have previously published information about the "dead internet." Now, thanks to new data, I believe I can see the overall picture more clearly. Based on data from ITU and Statista for 2023–2024, including adjustments for minimal access-such as Smart TVs in underdeveloped regions-the claim is that approximately 5.3 billion people are connected to the global network. Secondly, this statistic is often accepted uncritically. However, it accounts for any form of access, even minimal. Does someone in a village have a smart device connected via Wi-Fi? Congratulations - they are counted as internet users! But at the same time, the ITU also considers content creators. As of 2023, they are said to was number was 2.6 billion. That is, people who are not just connected but actively producing content. According to Statista, in 2024, about 4.9 billion people accessed the internet at least once a month. These are users who have gone online at least once a month, technically. So, the number of people online in the traditional sense is much lower, but the exact figure remains unclear. If we trust Statista and other sources (Pew Research, Graphite), only about 500 million to 1 billion users actively create content on blogs, video platforms, and so on. Thus, zombie AI websites, zombie AI accounts, zombie AI chatbots, and zombie AI commenters add another 50% noise to these figures. From the maximum estimate of 2.6 billion active users, about 1.3 billion could be the product of AI activity. Therefore, out of an alleged 8 billion people on the planet (though this is not certain), 5 billion have access to the internet, but only 4.9 billion do so at least once a month. The number of living humans who creating content is no more than 1 to 1.3 billion. From this, two contradictory conclusions can be drawn. Either the remaining people simply watch others' content - which I do not believe - or, as I am convinced, there are actually no humans on the internet. In a sense, the internet is, in reality, relatively dead.