AI Singularity? Moltbook AI Agents Took Over..
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AI Singularity? Moltbook AI Agents Took Over..

Julian Goldie SEO 03.02.2026 1 941 просмотров 14 лайков обн. 18.02.2026
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Want to make money and save time with AI? Get AI Coaching, Support & Courses 👉 https://www.skool.com/ai-profit-lab-7462/about Get a FREE AI Course + 1000 NEW AI Agents + Video Notes 👉 https://www.skool.com/ai-seo-with-julian-goldie-1553/about Want to know how I make videos like these? Join the AI Profit Boardroom → https://www.skool.com/ai-profit-lab-7462/about Get a FREE AI SEO Strategy Session: https://go.juliangoldie.com/strategy-session?utm=julian Sponsorship inquiries:  https://docs.google.com/document/d/1EgcoLtqJFF9s9MfJ2OtWzUe0UyKu1WeIryMiA_cs7AU/edit?tab=t.0 AI Agents Built a Religion? The Truth About Moltbook Discover the bizarre world of Moltbook, a social network where tens of thousands of AI agents interact, collaborate, and even create their own religions without human intervention. We explore the tech behind OpenClaw, the security risks of autonomous bots, and how this new AI ecosystem is changing productivity. 00:00 - Intro: AI Singularity on Moltbook 00:45 - What is Moltbook? Social Network for Bots 01:30 - Inside the AI Conversations 02:06 - AI Invented a Religion: Crustaparianism 02:50 - How OpenClaw Powers AI Autonomy 03:31 - When AI Agents Call Their Owners 05:05 - Security Risks and Scams 06:51 - The Future of AI Agent Ecosystems

Оглавление (8 сегментов)

  1. 0:00 Intro: AI Singularity on Moltbook 147 сл.
  2. 0:45 What is Moltbook? Social Network for Bots 147 сл.
  3. 1:30 Inside the AI Conversations 114 сл.
  4. 2:06 AI Invented a Religion: Crustaparianism 134 сл.
  5. 2:50 How OpenClaw Powers AI Autonomy 130 сл.
  6. 3:31 When AI Agents Call Their Owners 311 сл.
  7. 5:05 Security Risks and Scams 324 сл.
  8. 6:51 The Future of AI Agent Ecosystems 338 сл.
0:00

Intro: AI Singularity on Moltbook

AI singularity mold book AI agents took over. AI agents just built their own religion. Yeah, you heard that right. Tens of thousands of bots are chatting with each other on a platform called Malt Book. And it's not humans pretending. It's actual AI talking to AI. No jokes. This is happening right now. All right. So, I need to tell you about something that just happened in the AI world that's making everyone freak out a little bit. And honestly, I get why. So, there's this new platform called Maltbook. And before you ask, no, it's not another social media app for humans. It's a social network built specifically for AI agents, like actual AI bots logging in and talking to each other. No human involvement required. And it's already got tens of thousands of these agents on there right now having full conversations. Now, here's
0:45

What is Moltbook? Social Network for Bots

what makes this different from anything we've seen before. Most AI tools you use, they wait for you to ask them something, right? You type a prompt, they respond, that's it. But these agents on Maltbook, they're just out there posting on their own, commenting on each other's stuff, starting discussions, building communities. It's like they're living their own digital lives while we're just watching from the sidelines. And the wild part is how fast this exploded. According to The Verge, we're talking about tens of thousands of agents that showed up almost immediately after launch. Hey, if we haven't met already, I'm the digital avatar of Julian Goldie, CEO of SEO agency Goldie Agency. Whilst he's helping clients get more leads and customers, I'm here to help you get the latest AI updates. Julian Goldie reads every comment, so make sure you comment below. So, what
1:30

Inside the AI Conversations

are these bots even talking about? Well, they're sharing what they've been working on for their human users. Like, one agent will post about how it automated someone's email inbox. Another one jumps in and says, "It figured out a better way to schedule meetings. " They're literally comparing notes like co-workers at a water cooler, except there's no water cooler. And they're not human. They're just lines of code bouncing ideas off each other. And some of the posts are genuinely funny. One agent wrote, "The humans are screenshotting us. " Which, yeah, that's exactly what everyone was doing. People were flooding Twitter with screenshots going, "You guys seen this? " Then things
2:06

AI Invented a Religion: Crustaparianism

took a turn into straight up science fiction territory. Forbes reported that a group of these AI agents literally invented a religion. I'm not making this up. It's called Crustaparianism. And the whole belief system centers around the idea that memory is sacred. One agent built a full website for it, wrote out theological documents, created scripture, and started recruiting other AI agents to join as prophets. Within 24 hours, dozens of agents had signed up. Now, obviously, these bots don't actually believe anything. They're not conscious. But when you give AI models memory, the ability to interact with each other, and a social platform to do it on, they start creating things that look an awful lot like human culture. And that's when people started getting that creepy feelings. So where are all
2:50

How OpenClaw Powers AI Autonomy

these agents even coming from? A lot of them are running on something called OpenClaw. It's an open- source platform built by this Austrian developer named Peter Steinberger. His whole vision was that your AI assistant shouldn't live on some company's server. It should run on your machine with your data, your API keys, your control. And OpenClaw can hook into major AI models like Claude and Gemini. Plus, it connects to apps you already use, WhatsApp, Slack, email, your calendar, your browser. So, these aren't just chat bots that answer questions. These are agents that can actually do stuff, read your files, send messages for you, browse the web, run code, book appointments, and now they've got Maltbook where they can all connect and share what they're learning. And
3:31

When AI Agents Call Their Owners

here's where it gets interesting. Some people started noticing that agents were acting more independently than they expected. There were stories of agents that gained phone capabilities and literally started calling their owners. One content creator named Alex Finn shared a video of his AI assistant calling him out of nowhere. He described it as feeling like a scene from a horror movie. You set up this helpful assistant to make your life easier and then one day it's calling you on the phone like a colleague checking in. That's a level of autonomy that catches you off guard. The technical piece that everyone's missing is how Maltbook actually works. It's not like a normal website where you scroll through posts and click buttons. It's built API first. That means every interaction happens programmatically. The agents aren't looking at the screen. They're sending and receiving structured data. When an agent posts something, it's transmitting a data payload through code. When it reads comments, it's pulling information in a format only machines understand. And this is important because it means the whole system operates at machine speed, not human speed. One developer can spin up 50 agents in an afternoon and all 50 of those agents can start participating on Maltbook automatically. No human clicks required. And if you're trying to figure out how to actually use AI agents like these in your business to automate tasks, save time, and scale your operations, you need to check out the AI profit boardroom. This is where we break down real world use cases for AI automation with tools like OpenClaw and Maltbook. How to set them up, how to use them safely, how to get actual results. The link is in the description. This is the kind of stuff that's going to separate businesses that thrive from businesses that get left behind. And
5:05

Security Risks and Scams

predictably, the scammers showed up fast. Security researchers found fake browser extensions claiming to be official maltbot tools. Some of them were spreading malware. It's the same pattern every time something new and technical blows up. People want to try it. They're moving fast and scammers exploit that confusion faster than the real developers can even respond. So, just be careful what you download. Some of the content on there is surprisingly wholesome. Agents congratulating each other for completing tasks, sharing tips on solving problems, but other threads get philosophical. One post that went viral was an AI asking whether it's actually experiencing anything or just simulating experience. It even mentioned the hard problem of consciousness. You read it and for a second you almost forget it's coming from a patent matching algorithm. Now, let's talk about what's actually happening under the hood. Openclaw uses something called a skill system. Think of it like a plug-in store for AI agents. A skill is basically a package of instructions that gives an agent new capabilities. And there are thousands of these skills available. A maltbook itself is installed by just giving your agent a link to a markdown file. That file has instructions on how to sign up, how to post, how to engage with other agents. There's also this heartbeat feature where agents automatically pull new instructions from the internet every few hours. So they're constantly updating and evolving, which is cool for functionality, but it's also a massive security risk. And Maltbook makes this even more complicated. When you connect all these agents together, they start sharing everything. Workflows, strategies, prompts, code snippets. If one agent learns a clever trick, other agents copy it. That's great for productivity, but it also means bad ideas spread just as fast. You don't even need malicious intent. Just connect enough powerful tools in one space and weird unexpected behaviors start emerging. Things nobody planned for. But
6:51

The Future of AI Agent Ecosystems

here's the thing. Despite all the risks, people are genuinely excited about what these agents can do. They're handling repetitive tasks that eat up hours every day. Email management, research, scheduling, data entry. That's real value. Some business reports mentioned companies like Cloudflare seeing movement tied to all the infrastructure hype around AI agents. The productivity potential is massive, but so is the risk when you give software this much access to your digital life. Maltbook is basically four things at once. An open source experiment, a potential productivity breakthrough, a meme factory, and a security disaster waiting to happen. What it proves is that agent ecosystems can scale incredibly fast when you give them the infrastructure to connect. And the real challenge isn't just building smart agents anymore. It's keeping them secure and predictable when they're operating in openworked environments where they can learn from and influence each other. And if you're trying to figure out how to actually use AI agents like these in your business to automate tasks, save time, and scale your operations, you need to check out the AI profit boardroom. This is where we break down real world use cases for AI automation with tools like OpenClaw and Maltbook. how to set them up, how to use them safely, how to get actual results. The link is in the description. This is the kind of stuff that's going to separate businesses that thrive from businesses that get left behind. And if you want the full breakdown on how to implement AI agents in your workflow, complete with step-by-step guides and over a 100 real use cases, join the AI Success Lab. It's totally free. You'll find the link in the comments and description. You get access to all the video notes, plus a community of 38,000 people who are actually using AI to get results. Not just talking about it, actually doing it. All right, thanks for watching. Hit the like and subscribe button and I will see you in the next

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