I'm probably alone in this, but WEI is a good thing. Anyone who's run a site knows the headache around bots. Sites that don't care about bots can simply not use WEI. Of course, we know they will use it, because bots are a headache. Millions of engineer hours are wasted yearly on bot nonsense.
With the improvements in AI this was inevitable anyway. Anyone who thinks otherwise is delusional. Reap what you sow and what not.
edit: removing ssl comparison since it's not really my point to begin with
In either case, WEI has the potential to be proper DRM, like in the “approved devices” fashion. It’s deeply invasive, and can be used to exclude any type of usage at the whim of mega corps, like screen readers, ad blocking, anti-tracking/fingerprinting, downloading copyrighted content, and anything new they can think of in the future. It’s quite literally the gateway to making the web an App Store (or at best, multiple app stores).
> What's the alternative solution?
To what problem? Bots specifically or humans who want to use the web in any way they want?
If bots, then elaborate. Many bots are good, and ironically the vast majority of bot traffic comes from the very corporations that are behind this stuff. As for the really bad bots, we have IP blocklisting. For the gray/manipulative bots, sure, that’s a problem. What makes you think that problem needs to be addressed with mandatory handcuffs for everyone else?
This notion of destroying the open web is so nonsensical. WEI is not obligatory. If it's being implemented it's because it solves a real problem. Think about it. There will still be sites that don't use it.
People's real issue is that the big sites will use WEI because the problem it solves is legitimate but they don't want to identify themselves, which makes sense, but they were never obligated to let you visit their site to begin with.
I mean.. I think you’re answering your own question here.
You can argue that the web shouldn’t be open. In fact, there are many arguments for that, which I don’t mind arguing against.
There are many things that do not belong on the web, precisely because it’s open. For instance, a registry of people’s political views. Or naked pictures you don’t want the world to retain forever. And so on. The fact that the (open) web is not suitable for everything has been true since its inception. Openness comes with trade offs.
The honest way of putting it, is that WEI wants to make the web less open so that it can have more content, or protect content better.
On an opt-in basis, this is fine in theory. But WEI would never ever be opt-in with meaningful consent. It’s entirely dead in the water there, because non techies will not understand what or why this is “needed”. Heck, people don’t even grok cookies. In practice, this will be enabled by default, which is exactly the fear. Alt browsers would be bullied to support it, and users would be forced to use it.