Insights
Updated July 3, 2026.
For twenty years, “build vs. buy” had a boring answer: buy. Why sink engineers into a CRM or a project tracker when someone else already sells a polished one for a few dollars a seat? That logic built the entire software-as-a-service industry. In 2026, it stopped being obvious.
Call it the SaaSpocalypse. In early 2026, roughly 300 billion of market value evaporated once investors did the math on what AI agents actually replace. The thing that made SaaS printing-press profitable, charging per human seat, only works when you need a lot of humans clicking around in the software. Agents don’t click. They just do the task.
The web just quietly passed a milestone nobody threw a party for. According to Cloudflare’s traffic radar, automated traffic recently crossed the halfway mark, which means more of the internet is now machines than people. Forecasters didn’t expect that line to be crossed until 2027. It happened early.
Sit with that for a second. When you publish something today, the odds are better than even that the first thing to read it isn’t a person. It’s a bot, an agent, a crawler, a model quietly ingesting your words to answer someone else’s question later.
If you want to understand where media is headed in 2026, watch where the trust goes. Everything else, the budgets, the formats, the platforms, is in motion. Trust is the one asset that got harder to earn and more valuable to hold.
The picture is one of contraction. Big newsrooms kept shrinking. CNN, The Washington Post, and NBC News all cut staff, and the reporters who stayed now cover three beats where they used to cover one, leaning on AI to research and draft just to keep up. Adoption is nearly universal, north of 80% by most counts, but the people using these tools trust them the least. They’ve seen the confident hallucinations. So they hold the line on original reporting and human verification, because their name is on the byline, not the model’s.
For decades, broadcast ran on boxes. Expensive, single-purpose hardware, racked and wired, each doing one job very well. In 2026, that era is ending in earnest. The boxes are losing to software, and the shift is reshaping how media gets made and moved from the cable up.
IP is no longer the plan, it’s the deadline
Moving to IP-based workflows used to be a roadmap item, the thing everyone agreed they’d get to eventually. Two forces turned “eventually” into “now”: aging hardware that’s expensive to keep alive, and the ongoing reallocation of C-band satellite spectrum, which is squeezing the transponder capacity broadcasters have leaned on for decades. The FCC’s Upper C-band proceeding (3.98–4.2 GHz), published in December 2025, is the clearest signal yet that the ground is moving under satellite distribution. Broadcasters no longer have the luxury of waiting.