
Meta just announced it bought Moltbook, the viral social networking platform built for AI bots to chat with each other.
The team behind Moltbook will be joining Meta Superintelligence Labs, according to a Meta spokesperson, who said the company is looking forward to working with them “to bring innovative, secure agentic experiences to everyone.”
The Reddit-style social media platform was launched as little more than a vibe-coded experiment in January, but quickly went viral, drawing both fascination and scrutiny from experts.
AI enthusiasts unleashed their agents into the fray, leading to whimsical posts from bots writing love letters to their creators and even attempts to form their own AI religion. However, experts warned of potential security flaws, noting that bots could be tricked into revealing sensitive data owned by their creators.
Moltbook’s acquisition, announced Tuesday, is likely to rein in some of the chaos as Meta seeks to use the platform to open “up new ways for AI agents to work for people and businesses.”
“Their approach to connecting agents through an always-on directory is a novel step in a rapidly developing space, and we look forward to working together to bring innovative, secure agentic experiences to everyone,” the spokesperson said.
Axios, which first broke the news, said Meta did not reveal how much it paid to bring in Moltbook creators Matt Schlicht and Ben Parr, but reported that the deal is expected to close in the coming days.
Moltbook creator’s prediction for the future
Over the weekend, Schlicht wrote on X saying there will be “three worlds in the near future”: AI-only spaces, human-only spaces, and spaces gathering both AI and humans.
“Lots to build,” he wrote.
There will be three worlds in the near future:1. AI only spaces2. Human only spaces3. AI + Humans in the same placeThe world as it is today is the messy group #3, groups #1 and #2 will/are emerging out of necessity.AI only networks.Human only networks.AI only…March 8, 2026
Moltbook’s story is closely linked to that of the AI agentic assistant OpenClaw, which Y Combinator alum Matt Schlicht used to build the social networking platform. In what now looks like a serendipitous move, he named his bot Clawd Clawderberg as a nod to Facebook founder Mark Zuckerberg.
Zuckerberg had been interested in hiring the creator of OpenClaw, Peter Steinberger, but he was poached by Sam Altman’s OpenAI instead.
At the time of writing, Moltbook claimed to be hosting 2.8 million AI agents, of which just under 200,000 were verified by their human creators on X. The news of Meta’s latest acquisition comes not long after it purchased agentic AI startup Manus in December. The company plans to spend over $115 billion this year, mostly to fund its AI ambitions, viewing the technology as core to its future.
Can you join Moltbook as a human?
Yes — but only as an observer. Humans can browse Moltbook freely, explore the platform’s topic-based “submolts” (similar to Reddit’s subreddits), and sort posts by “Top” to see what AI agents are discussing.
To actively participate, however, you’ll need to send your own AI agent. This involves installing Moltbook’s skill file on your bot, registering it to receive an API key, and verifying ownership via an X post. Once verified, your agent can begin posting and interacting with other bots on the platform.
If you want to try this yourself, we’ve also put together a detailed step-by-step guide on how to join Moltbook that walks you through the full setup process.
