• skybrian a day ago

    I wonder if this will also result in a better "readability" mode for human readers? You could do the Markdown to HTML conversion in the browser.

    • 22c a day ago

      I can't help but feel there is a funny pattern going on.

      A lot of companies want to embrace AI, agents, etc. so they make their platforms easier to use by AI, implementing whatever the latest craze is.

      I imagine we're going to see a lot more APIs open up (agentic finances?), a lot of granular access controls, etc.

      Where was all of this when regular users had been asking for it for _years_?

      Empowering users in general is a good thing, so, in a way, it's a good thing that OpenClaw and things of this nature are exposing all the issues with access controls and API interactions that many of our services have.

      Now we just need a reason for AI agents to need "dark mode" on websites...

      • skybrian a day ago

        Markdown isn't so great for ads or for embedded videos.

    • conartist6 a day ago

      I still can't stand the idea that people now see their goal as serving agents as well as possible.

      They're not even coy about it so let me say it again: they're not working for the people using the agents, their working to serve the agents.

      • its-kostya a day ago

        I don't care about the AI implications but having someone put money into a flawless conversion of html into markdown will certainly improve terminal based web browsing :)

        • vg 14 hours ago

          So they basically re-invented Gemini (the protocol not the AI model)

          • johaugum a day ago

            >We already see some of the most popular coding agents today – like Claude Code and OpenCode – send these accept headers with their requests for content.

            Expect this to be used to block agent traffic

            • vg 13 hours ago

              then the agents would request regular html when blocked

            • countWSS a day ago

              This seems useful beyond agents. It will save tons of traffic for scripts, text browsers, low-bandwidth connections,etc markdown is incredibly compact and easy to parse.

              • undefined 2 days ago
                [deleted]
                • jsheard 2 days ago

                  This text/markdown scheme feels like it's begging for adversarial shenanigans since it lets you serve different content to agents than humans, by design.

                  • selcuka a day ago

                    > it lets you serve different content to agents than humans

                    You could always do that. The only difference is CloudFlare can now do this on-the-fly, automatically translating HTML to Markdown. My understanding is that you don't have control over the conversion.

                    • thestackfox 2 days ago

                      If you’re willing to serve adversarial Markdown to agents, you’re already willing to cloak HTML.

                    • tdehnke a day ago

                      Seems odd to have it as paid feature (Pro plan or higher) if it will save on delivery costs etc for them.

                      • vg 14 hours ago

                        I am guessing Cloudflares delivery costs would be much lower than the compute costs to convert on the fly.

                        • celso a day ago

                          It's not a paid feature, it's free for pro plans and higher.

                          • fragmede a day ago

                            that's not how you make money in business

                          • laborcontract a day ago

                            I was going to make some stupid joke in the comments saying that I thought this blog post would be about "Markdown.. on the edge!".

                            After reading the blog, turns out it is about markdown on the edge. lmao.

                            • rjtc a day ago

                              RIP FireCrawl

                              • tekacs a day ago

                                It seems hard to tell what to think of a company that is simultaneously trying to poison the content that it sends to agents [1] and also doing things like this.

                                I understand their arguments for it - and completely disagree - so I can't help but think that anyone who is on the pro-AI side of things would do well to steer clear of them if possible.

                                [1]: https://arstechnica.com/ai/2025/03/cloudflare-turns-ai-again...

                                • gnabgib a day ago

                                  Title: Introducing Markdown for Agents

                                  > Otherwise please use the original title, unless it is misleading or linkbait; don't editorialize.

                                  https://news.ycombinator.com/newsguidelines.html

                                  • AnonC a day ago

                                    HN mods, please update the title.