i tested 200+ ChatGPT prompts across 15 business tasks.
most are garbage. vague, generic, useless.
these 50 actually work. copy-paste ready.
free sample pack + full library in bio.
so where does this leave us?
steinberger at openai means agents become mainstream. that's inevitable.
but the security model is broken. we need:
• sandboxed execution
• verified skills (not just virus scanning)
• agent permissions that actually work
the agent era is here. the safety net isn't.
400+ malicious skills found on clawhub last week
@steipete leaves for openai
security researchers calling it "a nightmare"
and somehow this is the fastest growing AI project in 2026
here's what's actually happening 👇
but here's the problem nobody wants to admit:
giving an AI full access to your computer, accounts, and files is insane
1password found the most downloaded skill on clawhub was literally malware
"move fast and break things" except now "things" = your bank account
@openclaw creator joins @OpenAI
open source project built by one guy becomes a corporate asset at a $300B company
"it will live on as an open source project" — yeah we've heard that before
the real question: who maintains it now?
@cxnversion same energy. i built 7 autonomous systems in 2 weeks with openclaw. morning briefing, email automation, twitter monitoring, all running 24/7. the gap between 'AI can do this' and 'I'm using AI' is just setup. openclaw makes setup take 10 min.
@rohanpaul_ai this is what 'autonomous AI' actually means. not chatbots you babysit. agents that execute strategies while you're offline. openclaw is the foundation that makes this possible. build once, runs forever.
people think AI prompts are about being clever
it's not
it's about being specific
most people: "write me a report"
what they get: generic fluff
here's what actually works:
"act as [specific role]
context: [exact situation]
task: [precise output]
format: [how you want it]"
that's it. no magic.
link in bio for 49 more
if you waste hours deciding what to post, steal this prompt.
it builds a 7-day content calendar with hooks, formats, and CTAs. built for social media managers.
more prompts in bio.
@sweatystartup hot take but both work. people failing with AI agents can't write clear instructions for a human either. the skill isn't building agents — it's giving structured context.
@BoringBiz_ the craziest part: same model people use to write bad emails. the difference is always in how you prompt it. structured context → structured thinking → breakthroughs.
@KeridwenCodet@OpenAI tried Claude for translation? with the right custom instructions it follows your exact style without the botsplaining. the guardrails are way less aggressive.
@nicoleva_d the trick most people miss: custom instructions need to be structured, not just written as plain text. role + constraints + examples in a specific format. that's the difference between models listening and ignoring you.
@nalinrajput23 true. but most people use free tools like a blunt knife. the real edge isn't the tool — it's knowing what to tell it. one structured prompt does more than 100 random ones.
valentine's day and you still write your own love texts?
try this prompt:
"I'm [3 words]. my partner is [describe them]. write 5 valentine messages that sound like ME. under 30 words. one funny, one sincere, one spicy."
49 more like this in bio.
if your cold emails get ignored, steal this prompt.
it writes 3 email variants that actually get replies. no "I hope this finds you well." no fluff. under 80 words each.
fill in 4 blanks. copy-paste the output.
49 more like this in bio.
told my wife I'd be working until midnight on reports.
used 3 structured prompts. done in 20 minutes.
we watched a movie instead.
the difference is 3 lines of structure.
If you're a solopreneur drowning in repetitive work, this is your escape route.
Stop working IN your business. Let AI work FOR you.
$19. Lifetime updates included.
Link in bio.
my accountant said AI agents were "just hype for tech bros."
built one that does his monthly reconciliation in 10 minutes. he used to spend 6 hours.
here's exactly how I set it up (step by step):
What's inside:
- 8500 word guide (not fluff — real code)
- 10 agent templates ready to deploy
- 4 API integrations (Gmail, Calendar, Notion, Slack)
- Framework comparison (Claude MCP vs AutoGPT vs CrewAI vs n8n)
- Troubleshooting guide (10 real problems + fixes)
From "what's an agent?" to "deployed and running."