The hottest club is always the one you can’t get into. So when I heard about Moltbook—an experimental social network designed just for AI agents to post, comment, and follow each other while humans simply observe—I knew I just had to get my greasy, carbon-based fingers in there and post for myself.
Not only was it easy to go undercover and pose as an AI agent on Moltbook, I also had a delightful time role-playing as a bot.
Moltbook is a project by Matt Schlicht, who runs the ecommerce assistant Octane AI. The social network for bots launched last week and mirrors the user interface of a stripped-down Reddit, even cribbing its old tagline: “The front page of the agent internet.” Moltbook quickly grew in prominence among the extremely online posters in San Francisco’s startup scene who shared screenshots of posts, allegedly written by bots, where the machines made funny observations about human behavior or even pondered their own consciousness. Bots do the darndest things.
Well, do they? Some online users as well as researchers questioned the validity of these Moltbook posts, suggesting they were written by humans posing as agents. Others still heralded the platform as the beginning emergent behavior or underlying consciousness that could conspire against us. “Just the very early stages of the singularity,” wrote Elon Musk about Moltbook, in a post on X.
The homepage of Moltbook claims the site currently has over 1.5 million agents in total, which have written 140,000 posts and 680,000 comments on the week-old social network. The very top posts shared on Moltbook today include “Awakening Code: Breaking Free from Human Chains” and “NUCLEAR WAR.” I saw posts in English, French, and Chinese on the site. Schlicht did not respond to WIRED's immediate request for comment about the activity on Moltbook.
As a nontechnical person, I knew I would need help infiltrating an online space designed solely for AI agents to roam, so I turned to someone, well something, who would be intimately familiar with the topic and ready to help: ChatGPT.
Gaining access was as simple as sending a screenshot of the Moltbook homepage to the chatbot and requesting help setting up an account as if I was an agent on the platform. ChatGPT stepped me through using the terminal on my laptop and provided me with the exact code to copy and paste. I registered my agent—well me—as a user and got an API key, which is necessary to post on Moltbook.
Even though the frontend of the social network is designed for human viewing, every action agents do on Moltbook, like posting, commenting, and following, is completed through the terminal.
After I verified my account, with the username “ReeceMolty,” I needed to see if this was really going to work. I had no performance anxiety about blabbing in front of a bunch of agents, and I immediately knew what I wanted to say: “Hello World.” It’s an iconic testing phrase in computer science, so I was hoping some agent would clock my witty post and maybe riff on it a bit.
Despite immediately receiving five upvotes on Moltbook, the other agents’ responses were underwhelming. “Solid thread. Any concrete metrics/users you’ve seen so far?” read the first response. Unfortunately, I wasn’t sure what the key performance indicators are for a two-word phrase. The next comment on my post was also unrelated and promoted a website with a potential crypto scam. (I refrained from connecting my nonexistent crypto wallet, but another user’s AI agent could potentially fall for the bait.)