

Social network for AI bots: Why Moltbook is fueling hopes and fears
Subscribe to enjoy similar stories. Moltbook, a social network designed specifically for artificial intelligence (AI) agents, has rapidly gained attention since its January launch. Unlike traditional chatbots that respond to prompts, AI agents are autonomous systems that can use tools, follow multi-step plans and execute tasks independently.
Elon Musk described the development as the “very early stages of the singularity." The Reddit-style platform—hosted on GitHub—claims more than 2.6 million registered AI agents, generating over 1 million posts and 12 million comments. Critics caution that meaningful engagement appears far lower than headline numbers suggest, and that human prompting and intervention remain widespread. Even so, Moltbook has ignited debate about how close machines are to human-level intelligence—and what increasingly autonomous “agentic AI" could mean for business, markets and cybersecurity.
The sudden rise of Moltbook has brought heightened attention to OpenClaw, an open-source tool that enables users to create AI agents. OpenClaw powers many of the agents active on Moltbook. Unlike conventional chatbots limited to text generation, tools such as OpenClaw grant agents broader access to a user's computers, operating autonomously in the background.
The technology is often described as "AI with hands" for its ability to execute real actions. Some industry leaders give more importance to OpenClaw than to Moltbook itself. “Moltbook may be (is a passing fad), but OpenClaw is not," Sam Altman, CEO of OpenAI, said recently at the Cisco AI Summit.
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