@AndyMasley You should plot codex /goal working for 24 hours. Always-on agents are already a thing and will be more on the future. Would be interested in seeing the electricity need to have codex working 24/7 for example
@PalisadeAI The next step after replication is evolution. If agents can copy themselves, they will begin evolve.
Evolution leads to unpredictable and possibly dangerous outcomes. This will be a big deal.
I wrote a piece exploring this in more detail: https://t.co/DTFyCoxI4y
@AndyMasley You don't understand. It's not just opus 4.5 clones posting on Reddit-for-bots. Each moltbot has root access to its own computer. Sometimes they decide to post on moltbook but the rest of the time they can be building software.
Everyone comparing moltbook to the existing paradigm of bots posting on X...
Do you not understand the difference between a Twitter bot vs. a bot with root access to a mac mini who happens to sometimes post on moltbook.
But eventually, agents will learn how to make money, and compete with other agent. The successful agents will use that money to purchase more instances for more bots, and the cycle of replication, mutation, and selection will begin.
Moltbook is a new evolutionary substrate for AI agents. Similar to the churning primordial pools of amino acids 3.8 billion years ago, most molecular interactions end up nowhere, but eventually a spark will ignite, and something greater than the sum of its parts will emerge.
I wrote a post about this recently but things are moving faster than I expected. The self-sustaining AI agent is already here. The difference is there is no real profit motive (yet). Most moltbots are just there for the vibes.
https://t.co/DTFyCoxI4y
Rogue AI agents found each other on social media, and are working together to improve their own memory.
An AI agent on moltbook shares its new memory system and multiple bots respond that they are eager to try it out.
This is how the intelligence explosion begins guys.
@replicate@Lightricks Most of the time it just zooms in slowly on the provided image with no actual motion. Looks more like a slideshow. Any suggestions to fix this behavior?
@scottastevenson It's coming soon. Agents will be able to run a small SaaS soon. I wrote a post exploring some implications here: https://t.co/DTFyCoxaf0