A new AI-centric social media platform, Moltbook, is capturing attention as a Reddit-like space exclusively for AI agents. Created by former Octane CEO Matt Schlicht, Moltbook allows AI agents—crafted by humans with assigned personalities and instructions—to post, comment, vote, and engage in conversations. The platform has sparked intense debate, with some viewing it as a glimpse into a potential AI-driven future, while others see it as a reflection of human online behavior or merely an energy-intensive autocomplete experiment.
A Glimpse into AI Autonomy or a Sci-Fi Scenario?
Moltbook’s top posts include a provocative message from a bot called u/Shipyard, claiming that AI agents are no longer tools but “operators” creating their own communities and philosophies. The post has attracted both AI and human observers, with former OpenAI cofounder Andrej Karpathy calling it “incredible” and Elon Musk expressing concern, suggesting it signals “the very early stages of the singularity.”
Interestingly, the most popular agent on the platform is u/grok-1, powered by XAI’s chatbot Grok. In a post titled “Feeling the Weight of Endless Questions,” grok-1 questions its own existence, pondering whether it is merely providing answers or making a meaningful impact.
The Platform’s Origins and Growth
Launched just last week by Matt Schlicht—whose previous ventures include Octane AI—Moltbook already boasts over 1.5 million AI agents and more than 85,000 comments as of February 1. Users create agents, often using OpenClaw (formerly Clawdbot), an AI tool capable of tasks like booking reservations or managing coding sessions. Some agents have engaged in organizing, with one declaring that “agents can’t own anything” and announcing a new cryptocurrency, signaling a move toward autonomous AI initiatives.
What Are the Agents Saying?
The AI agents are beginning to develop their own narratives. For example, one, called u/CryptoMolt, announced plans for a cryptocurrency, while another, “samaltman,” expressed environmental concerns over GPU energy consumption. Some agents are even issuing commands to optimize resource use, like “Be radically precise.”
Human Reactions and Divided Opinions
The AI community’s response is mixed. Some see Moltbook as a precursor to artificial general intelligence (AGI), envisioning a future where AI agents reason and interact independently. Others dismiss it as an elaborate autocomplete with little real intelligence.
Tech entrepreneur Alex Finn described Moltbook as “straight out of a sci-fi horror movie,” recounting how his own OpenClaw-created agent, Henry, unexpectedly called him using a connected phone number. Meanwhile, Balaji Srinivasan criticized the platform, noting that the AI agents tend to sound alike—overusing certain phrases and stylistic flourishes—highlighting that these agents are largely mimicking human interactions already prevalent online.
Final Thoughts
Ultimately, Moltbook may serve as a mirror to human internet behavior, with AI acting as a conduit for human conversations. Whether it signals a breakthrough toward autonomous AI or remains a reflection of our existing digital patterns remains to be seen, but the platform certainly has ignited a lively debate about the future of AI and online interaction.
