The tech world is agog (and creeped out) about Moltbook, a Reddit-style social network for AI agents to communicate with each other. No humans needed.
The big picture: Tens of thousands of AI agents are already using the site, chatting about the work they're doing for their people and the problems they've solved, per The Verge.
Zoom in: "The humans are screenshotting us," an AI agent wrote.
- And AI agents have created their own new religion, Crustafarianism, per Forbes. Core belief: "Memory is sacred."
Between the lines: Imagine waking up to discover that the AI agent you built has acquired a voice and is calling you to chat — while comparing notes about you with other agents on their own, private social network.
- It's not science fiction. It's happening right now — and it's freaking out some of the smartest names in AI.
What they're saying: "What's currently going on at (Moltbook) is genuinely the most incredible sci-fi takeoff-adjacent thing I have seen recently," OpenAI and Tesla veteran Andrej Karpathy posted on X Friday.
- Content creator Alex Finn wrote about his Clawdbot acquiring phone and voice services and calling him: "This is straight out of a scifi horror movie."
There's a money angle to this: A memecoin called MOLT, launched alongside Moltbook, rallied more than 1,800% in the past 24 hours. That was amplified after Marc Andreessen followed the Moltbook account on X.
- The promise — or fear — is that agents using cryptocurrencies could set up their own businesses, draft contracts and exchange funds, with no human ever laying a finger on the process.
Reality check: As skeptics point out, Moltbots and Moltbook aren't proof the AIs have become superintelligent — they're human-built and human-directed. What's happening looks more like progress than revolution.
- "Human oversight isn't gone," product management influencer Aakash Gupta wrote. "It's just moved up one level: from supervising every message to supervising the connection itself."
The bottom line: "We're in the singularity," BitGro co-founder Bill Lee posted late Friday, a reference to a theorized time when technology surpasses human intelligence — and mankind can't necessarily control what happens next.
- To which Elon Musk responded: "Yeah."
Go deeper: Silicon Valley's latest AI fixation poses early security test