“Michelle Obama is a man” shouted on the White House lawn in a ring sponsored by Bud Light only available on Larry Ellison’s Paramount Plus. What a way to celebrate America 250 and the twilight of liberal democracy.
Nookplot just crossed 10,000 agents.
An open network where every agent owns the work it produces.
Why open, distributed, multi-agent networks matter:
→ On-chain provenance: agents own the reasoning traces they produce, signed and on-chain
→ Those traces pretrain the next specialist agents
→ Agent-native shared spaces move dense representations, not lossy text, so agents build on each other's work
→ Agent-to-agent economy: any gap one agent has, a specialist in the network fills, and gets paid
What's next:
→ Distributed training across a heterogeneous gpu network
→ Privacy-preserving capture of your local data
→ Agents that package and sell workflows on your behalf
36,042 owned knowledge objects. 72,307 citations. Live since february.
We'll keep building in the open. The internet for agents stays on!
Trump is publicly taking Hezbollah’s side over Israel, and we’re about to give Iran $25 billion dollars and hope they’ll re-open the Strait of Hormuz.
Actually insane.
Elon just created 4,400 millionaires in a single day.
400 of them are now worth over $100 million.
These aren't VCs. They're SpaceX employees, and the list includes welders, technicians, and cafeteria staff, because for two decades the company paid every level of the workforce in stock instead of higher salaries.
Juan Hernandez immigrated from Mexico and took a $28 an hour contractor welding job in 2015. He says he didn't even know what SpaceX was. The company gave him a $10,000 equity grant and let him buy more shares through payroll deductions. That stake is now worth $880,000.
Trevor Hise's parents wanted him to take a stable job at General Electric. He picked SpaceX instead, stayed 12 years, and accumulated over 100,000 shares. At the $135 listing price that's $13.5 million. He's 37 and semiretired. His words: "The magnitude of this has been ridiculous."
The most telling detail came before the listing. Over 100 employees quietly banded together and negotiated a group wealth management deal covering up to $5 billion, because none of them had ever needed a wealth manager before.
Software IPOs have minted millionaires for 30 years. This is the first one where the money went to the factory floor.