I could see it being huge for the GUI scraping market. Or imagine a browser plugin that watches what you're doing and then offers to 'rewire' the web page to match your habits.
Imagine some sort of Clippy assistant watching where you hover attention as you read HN for example. After a while it says 'say, you seem to be more interested in the time series than the tree structure, would you rather just look at the activity on this thread than the semantics?' Or perhaps you import/include a sentiment analysis library, and it just asks you whether you want the big picture for the whole discussion, or whether you'd rather drill down to the thread/post/sentence level.
I notice all the examples I'm thinking of revolve around a simple pattern of someone asking 'Computer, here is a Thing; what can you tell me about it?' and the computer offering simplified schematic representations that allow the person to home in on features of interest and either do things with them or posit relationships to other features. This will probably set off all sorts of arms races, eg security people will want to misdirect AI-assisted intruders, marketers will probably want tos tart rendering pages as flat graphics to maintain brand differentiation and engagement vs a 'clean web' movement that wants to get rid of visual cruft and emphasize the basic underlying similarities.
It will lead to quite bitter arguments about how things should be; you'll have self-appointed champions of aesthetics saying that AI is decomposing the rich variety of human creativity into some sort of borg-like formalism that's a reflection of its autistic creators, and information liberators accusing the first group of being obscurantist tyrants trying to profit off making everything more difficult and confusing than it needs to be.