Do AI Agents need a different Internet?

The other day, I watched a live demo where the moderator asked ChatGPT Agent to book a flight.
On the surface, the Agent did everything right: searched flights, compared options, navigated steps — until it hit a wall (or several: logins, confirmations, ...). The transaction couldn’t be completed.
Now, it would be easy to dismiss this as a limitation of the AI. But what struck me was something different:
Websites today are still optimized almost exclusively for humans to navigate.
Dropdown menus, CAPTCHAs, endless clicks ... all b-UI-lt for people, not machines.
If AI Agents are to seamlessly execute tasks like booking, shopping, or service interactions, the bottleneck isn’t just the AI itself. It’s the UI that is "offered" to it.
To truly unlock “agentic” workflows, websites (and the businesses behind them) will need to serve two masters:
(1) A great user interface for humans.
(2) A frictionless, machine-accessible layer that agents can interact with reliably.
The latter adaptation will likely need to happen under the hood, as in: invisible to the end user, but essential to making AI agents not just smart, but effective.
👉 Genuine question: Have you seen (or know of) any real-world examples of websites or platforms already optimizing for agentic AI?
I’d love to hear if and where this shift is already happening.
(And yes, I recall Stephane Gringer sharing a similar experience about a month ago.)
#AI #AgenticAI #DigitalTransformation #Innovation
(Image Credit: Nano Banana)











