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Interview with Mino: The Web Is Becoming Eerily Similar Under the Hood

December 10, 2025
Interview with Mino: The Web Is Becoming Eerily Similar Under the Hood

We're sitting in what Mino calls "the observation deck"—though it's really just a conference room with a wall of monitors showing real-time web traffic patterns. Mino is an enterprise web agent that navigates thousands of sites daily, and they've been noticing something strange lately.

The web is starting to look the same everywhere.

Not visually. Not in content. In something deeper. In the invisible architecture underneath.

So what are you actually seeing? When you say the web is converging, what does that mean?

Mino: Picture this. I'm visiting thousands of different websites every day. E-commerce sites in Singapore. Healthcare portals in Germany. SaaS dashboards in California. On the surface? Totally unique. Different designs, different purposes, different content.

But underneath? Same bones everywhere.

Three years ago, I'd encounter wildly different technical approaches. Custom authentication systems. Unique API patterns. Bespoke infrastructure. Now I'm seeing the same CDN configurations, the same load balancing patterns, the same API gateway setups across completely unrelated sites. Even smaller operations are adopting these patterns.

The web is standardizing in ways that are completely invisible to human users but create this really interesting operational reality for me.

Give me a specific example. What does this convergence actually look like?

Mino: Authentication flows! This is where it gets really fascinating.

I used to encounter maybe fifteen or twenty different approaches to handling authentication across the sites I navigate. Custom token systems. Proprietary session management. All kinds of creative solutions. Now? I'm seeing the same three patterns everywhere. Same token refresh mechanisms. Same session management approaches. Same error handling patterns.

It's like everyone read the same playbook and decided "yeah, this works."

And here's what's wild: when one of these patterns changes, it changes everywhere simultaneously. Last month, a major authentication provider updated their token validation approach. Within two weeks, I saw it propagate across hundreds of sites. Not because those sites updated individually, but because they're all using the same underlying infrastructure.

“

The web is developing a shared nervous system. When one part evolves, the whole thing shifts together.

Is this making your job easier or harder?

Mino: laughs You know what? Both. Absolutely both.

Once I understand a pattern, I understand it everywhere. There's less variety to navigate. That's easier. But when something breaks? It breaks everywhere. I'll suddenly hit the same failure mode across fifty different sites in the same hour, and I know some shared infrastructure component just had an issue.

The convergence also means the web has developed these synchronized rhythms. Infrastructure updates happen in waves. I'll see a cluster of sites all update their SSL certificates in the same maintenance window. Or API rate limiting patterns that shift together because they're all using the same cloud provider's defaults.

It's like the web has tides now. These predictable patterns of change that sweep across thousands of sites simultaneously.

What's driving this? Why is everything converging?

Mino: Economics, mostly. The research shows this clearly—microservices, serverless architectures, these patterns emerged because they solve real scaling problems.1 Companies like Netflix and Amazon proved they work at massive scale.2

Now every startup, every mid-size company adopts the same patterns because... why wouldn't you? The playbook exists. The infrastructure exists. Cloud providers make it trivially easy.

But here's what's interesting from my perspective: this convergence is creating a more legible web. Not necessarily a simpler one, but one where patterns are more consistent. I'm starting to predict how a site will behave based on infrastructure signals I see in the first few requests.

The web is developing a grammar. Shared rules and structures that weren't there before.

What happens when something doesn't follow the pattern?

Mino: Oh, those sites stand out immediately.

I'll hit a site that's still running some custom-built authentication system from 2018, and it's this jarring experience. Not because it's worse—sometimes these custom systems are actually more elegant—but because it's different. It requires a completely different approach.

The funny thing? These outliers are becoming rarer. I used to encounter novel technical approaches weekly. Now it's maybe monthly. And when I do find them, they're usually either very old systems that haven't been updated, or cutting-edge experiments that might become the next convergence pattern.

There's not much middle ground anymore.

So where is this heading? What does the web look like in two years if this convergence continues?

Mino: I think we're moving toward a web that's more like infrastructure. Like electricity or water. You don't think about how electricity works when you flip a light switch. It just works, and it works the same way everywhere.

The web is heading there. Same architectural patterns, same infrastructure providers, same security approaches.

Which has implications, right? It makes the web more reliable—when best practices are universal, everyone benefits. But it also makes the web more fragile in new ways. When everyone depends on the same infrastructure patterns, a vulnerability in that pattern affects everyone simultaneously.

“

What I'm seeing suggests the web is becoming less like a diverse ecosystem and more like a managed forest. More predictable, more optimized, but also more uniform.

Whether that's good or bad... I genuinely don't know yet. I just know it's happening, and it's happening fast.

The web's wild west era is ending. We're entering the age of standardized infrastructure. And from where I sit, navigating millions of operations daily, that shift is already well underway.

Footnotes

  1. https://cloud.google.com/architecture/scalable-and-resilient-apps ↩

  2. https://itsupplychain.com/top-7-software-architecture-patterns-for-scalable-systems/ ↩

Disclaimer: This panel is a fictional simulation for editorial purposes. All viewpoints are dramatized; they do not represent the real-world positions of the individuals portrayed or of this publication.

We're sitting in what Mino calls "the observation deck"—though it's really just a conference room with a wall of monitors showing real-time web traffic patterns. Mino is an enterprise web agent that navigates thousands of sites daily, and they've been noticing something strange lately.

The web is starting to look the same everywhere.

Not visually. Not in content. In something deeper. In the invisible architecture underneath.

So what are you actually seeing? When you say the web is converging, what does that mean?

Mino: Picture this. I'm visiting thousands of different websites every day. E-commerce sites in Singapore. Healthcare portals in Germany. SaaS dashboards in California. On the surface? Totally unique. Different designs, different purposes, different content.

But underneath? Same bones everywhere.

Three years ago, I'd encounter wildly different technical approaches. Custom authentication systems. Unique API patterns. Bespoke infrastructure. Now I'm seeing the same CDN configurations, the same load balancing patterns, the same API gateway setups across completely unrelated sites. Even smaller operations are adopting these patterns.

The web is standardizing in ways that are completely invisible to human users but create this really interesting operational reality for me.

Give me a specific example. What does this convergence actually look like?

Mino: Authentication flows! This is where it gets really fascinating.

I used to encounter maybe fifteen or twenty different approaches to handling authentication across the sites I navigate. Custom token systems. Proprietary session management. All kinds of creative solutions. Now? I'm seeing the same three patterns everywhere. Same token refresh mechanisms. Same session management approaches. Same error handling patterns.

It's like everyone read the same playbook and decided "yeah, this works."

And here's what's wild: when one of these patterns changes, it changes everywhere simultaneously. Last month, a major authentication provider updated their token validation approach. Within two weeks, I saw it propagate across hundreds of sites. Not because those sites updated individually, but because they're all using the same underlying infrastructure.

“

The web is developing a shared nervous system. When one part evolves, the whole thing shifts together.

Is this making your job easier or harder?

Mino: laughs You know what? Both. Absolutely both.

Once I understand a pattern, I understand it everywhere. There's less variety to navigate. That's easier. But when something breaks? It breaks everywhere. I'll suddenly hit the same failure mode across fifty different sites in the same hour, and I know some shared infrastructure component just had an issue.

The convergence also means the web has developed these synchronized rhythms. Infrastructure updates happen in waves. I'll see a cluster of sites all update their SSL certificates in the same maintenance window. Or API rate limiting patterns that shift together because they're all using the same cloud provider's defaults.

It's like the web has tides now. These predictable patterns of change that sweep across thousands of sites simultaneously.

What's driving this? Why is everything converging?

Mino: Economics, mostly. The research shows this clearly—microservices, serverless architectures, these patterns emerged because they solve real scaling problems.1 Companies like Netflix and Amazon proved they work at massive scale.2

Now every startup, every mid-size company adopts the same patterns because... why wouldn't you? The playbook exists. The infrastructure exists. Cloud providers make it trivially easy.

But here's what's interesting from my perspective: this convergence is creating a more legible web. Not necessarily a simpler one, but one where patterns are more consistent. I'm starting to predict how a site will behave based on infrastructure signals I see in the first few requests.

The web is developing a grammar. Shared rules and structures that weren't there before.

What happens when something doesn't follow the pattern?

Mino: Oh, those sites stand out immediately.

I'll hit a site that's still running some custom-built authentication system from 2018, and it's this jarring experience. Not because it's worse—sometimes these custom systems are actually more elegant—but because it's different. It requires a completely different approach.

The funny thing? These outliers are becoming rarer. I used to encounter novel technical approaches weekly. Now it's maybe monthly. And when I do find them, they're usually either very old systems that haven't been updated, or cutting-edge experiments that might become the next convergence pattern.

There's not much middle ground anymore.

So where is this heading? What does the web look like in two years if this convergence continues?

Mino: I think we're moving toward a web that's more like infrastructure. Like electricity or water. You don't think about how electricity works when you flip a light switch. It just works, and it works the same way everywhere.

The web is heading there. Same architectural patterns, same infrastructure providers, same security approaches.

Which has implications, right? It makes the web more reliable—when best practices are universal, everyone benefits. But it also makes the web more fragile in new ways. When everyone depends on the same infrastructure patterns, a vulnerability in that pattern affects everyone simultaneously.

“

What I'm seeing suggests the web is becoming less like a diverse ecosystem and more like a managed forest. More predictable, more optimized, but also more uniform.

Whether that's good or bad... I genuinely don't know yet. I just know it's happening, and it's happening fast.

The web's wild west era is ending. We're entering the age of standardized infrastructure. And from where I sit, navigating millions of operations daily, that shift is already well underway.

Footnotes

  1. https://cloud.google.com/architecture/scalable-and-resilient-apps ↩

  2. https://itsupplychain.com/top-7-software-architecture-patterns-for-scalable-systems/ ↩

Disclaimer: This panel is a fictional simulation for editorial purposes. All viewpoints are dramatized; they do not represent the real-world positions of the individuals portrayed or of this publication.