The current web ecosystem is designed and optimized exclusively for human consumption, requiring the download of heavy visual interfaces. However, an ever-growing portion of global traffic comes from Artificial Intelligence crawlers (LLMs). Forcing these automated agents to process the complete "Visual Web" generates critical scalability and sustainability problems, specifically massive bandwidth waste and computational expense. To resolve this inefficiency, the EOS Project proposes the B2AI Edge Standard, utilizing Content Negotiation at the network perimeter. (Previous updates established the Zero-Friction Optimization hypothesis, demonstrating preliminary bandwidth reductions of up to 90% and asymmetrical increases in LLM ingestion rates). Version 3 Update: Methodological Pivot & Parity Declaration Framework This version introduces a critical methodological pivot in the testbed architecture. Early stress tests utilizing monolithic payloads failed to differentiate between the ingestion mechanics of modern text-extractive AI agents (which generally ignore heavy media) and traditional rendering search engines (which download full visual payloads). To accurately measure the true systemic waste of the Web 4.0 ecosystem, the EOS research network has transitioned to a calibrated tripartite experimental design (Testbed A/B/C) utilizing a bi-layered payload (300 KB DOM + ~3 MB Visual proxy). Furthermore, this protocol identifies the "Cloaking Paradox"—where monopolistic search engine policies currently prevent the adoption of extreme energy-efficient edge routing under threat of algorithmic de-indexing. To resolve this, we introduce the Parity Declaration Framework: a trust-based, auditable regulatory proposal designed to align with the EU AI Act and the DSA. This framework enables data providers to serve lightweight, machine-readable semantic vectors (JSON-LD) legally and transparently, aiming to achieve over 99% energy efficiency per synthetic request without algorithmic retaliation.
Pablo Gil (Wed,) studied this question.