Cloudflare has acquired Human Native, a UK-based AI data marketplace, in a move aimed at helping AI companies access high-quality content while giving creators more control over how their work is used. The deal brings Human Native’s team and technology into Cloudflare’s broader push to build new tools and business models for content in the age of generative AI.
Human Native is described as specializing in turning multimedia content into searchable, useful data, with a focus on licensed data rather than scraped material. Cloudflare did not disclose financial terms for the acquisition.
A marketplace focused on licensed, “AI-ready” content
Cloudflare and Human Native have framed the acquisition around a growing challenge: AI systems need reliable, high-quality data, while publishers and creators want stronger control over access to their work. Cloudflare said it wants to help content owners choose between blocking access, optimizing content for AI discovery, or offering paid, licensed access that reflects the value of the content.
Cloudflare CEO Matthew Prince said creators should have “full control” over their work, whether they are writing for people or optimizing for AI, and tied the acquisition to building tools that let content be discovered, priced, and purchased through transparent channels. Human Native CEO Dr. James Smith said the company was founded to move generative AI beyond what he called its “Napster era,” with the goal of ensuring creators have control, compensation, and credit when their work powers AI products.
Why Cloudflare says the web’s model is under strain
Cloudflare said the open internet has long relied on a basic exchange where creators publish content and aggregators send traffic back, allowing creators to monetize through ads, subscriptions, or direct support. In its blog post, Cloudflare said this loop is under pressure, pointing to “crawl-to-referral ratios” that are “skyrocketing,” with “10s of thousands” of AI and bot crawls per real human visitor.
Cloudflare also said it is not always clear how multipurpose crawlers use the content they access. It added that creators and publishers across many fields share a common desire: deciding how their content is used by AI systems.
Tools Cloudflare is building for creators and AI developers
Cloudflare said it has been developing products intended to give content owners more control over automated access, including AI Crawl Control and Pay Per Crawl. The company also said it offers tools such as AI Search, and positioned these products as ways to support content owners with different strategies—ranging from broad visibility in training data sets to limiting access unless compensation is provided.
On the developer side, Cloudflare described crawling as costly and messy, noting that crawled indexes can include duplicates, spam, and illegal material, leaving developers with unstructured data. Cloudflare said it recently announced work on an “AI Index” that would let foundation model companies and agents access content at scale.
Instead of repeated crawling, Cloudflare described a publish/subscribe approach where participating sites would provide structured updates when content changes, and developers could subscribe to receive those updates in real time. Cloudflare said this approach could open new ways for creators to try different business models.
What Human Native brings to the acquisition
Human Native was founded in 2024 and has positioned itself as a marketplace connecting content creators and publishers with AI developers looking for high-quality material for training and inference. Techzine reported that Human Native is backed by British venture capital firms LocalGlobe and Mercuri.
Cloudflare said the Human Native team has worked on helping developers build better AI using licensed data, and that its technology helps turn unstructured content into something that can be understood, licensed, and valued. Cloudflare also said the Human Native team includes veterans from organizations such as DeepMind, Google, Figma, and Bloomberg.
In its blog post, Cloudflare shared an example involving one Human Native customer described as a prominent UK video AI company, saying the customer discarded existing training data after getting better results with Human Native-sourced data and then trained only on licensed, reputably sourced, high-quality content. Cloudflare and Human Native both presented the acquisition as part of creating an “AI-driven Internet economy” where content can be structured into “AI-ready” data, surfaced to buyers, and priced through clearer channels.
Cloudflare said it plans to integrate Human Native’s products and technology into its offerings over time, and noted that timing and availability depend on development and integration progress.
