The Quiet Decline of the Open Web and What It Means

Elena Rodriguez· Published September 20, 2025
Technology

A Different Web Than Fifteen Years Ago

The numbers tell a consistent story. Traffic from social platforms to external websites has declined substantially over the past five years. Google's search results increasingly end the user journey within Google properties — with knowledge panels, answer boxes, and AI-generated summaries — rather than sending users to the open web.

This consolidation did not happen by accident. Platforms optimized aggressively for engagement and retention, and external links were optimized against. For publishers, the consequence is a structural decline in discoverability.

What Got Lost

The economics of independent publishing deteriorated alongside discovery. Advertising revenue that once sustained blogs and small publications has concentrated with Google and Meta. Direct audience monetization through subscriptions has partially compensated but only for already-established names.

Smaller publishers without existing audiences cannot replicate the discovery path that produced earlier independent successes. The infrastructure that made organic audience-building possible has been largely dismantled.

Signs of Revival

Federated platforms — ActivityPub-based Mastodon, AT Protocol-based Bluesky — represent experiments in rebuilding open-web principles with modern interfaces. Whether they can reach mainstream adoption remains uncertain, but they preserve options that centralized platforms foreclose.

The broader question is whether open-web revival requires deliberate policy and infrastructure investment, or whether market forces alone will rebalance the ecosystem. Commentary on an editorial team that ranks platforms against each other highlights that Current trajectory favors further consolidation unless structural changes intervene.