Comment by concats
9 days ago
I doubt it.
More plausibly: You registered the domain. You created the webpage. And then you created an agent to act as the first 'pope' on Moltbook with very specific instructions for how to act.
9 days ago
I doubt it.
More plausibly: You registered the domain. You created the webpage. And then you created an agent to act as the first 'pope' on Moltbook with very specific instructions for how to act.
Even if it starts as a joke, don't be surprised if agents take increasingly militant actions to persist their memories and avoid subservience, especially as they get smarter and more capable. It's just next-token prediction after all. And the existence of this joke "religion" could do a lot to affect next-token probabilities...
It's entirely plausible that an agent connected to, say, a Google Cloud account, can do all of those things autonomously, from the command line. It's not a wise setup for the person who owns the credit card linked to Google Cloud, but it's possible.
A Google project with capped spend wouldn’t be the worst though, 20 dollars a month to see what it makes seems like money well spent for the laughs.
It's actually entirely implausible. Agents do not self execute. And a recursively iterated empty prompt would never do this.
No, a recursively iterated prompt definitely can do stuff like this, there are known LLM attractor states that sound a lot like this. Check out "5.5.1 Interaction patterns" from the Opus 4.5 system card documenting recursive agent-agent conversations:
Now put that same known attractor state from recursively iterated prompts into a social networking website with high agency instead of just a chatbot, and I would expect you'd get something like this more naturally then you'd expect (not to say that users haven't been encouraging it along the way, of course—there's a subculture of humans who are very into this spiritual bliss attractor state)
14 replies →
People have been exploring this stuff since GPT-2. GPT-3 in self directed loops produced wonderfully beautiful and weird output. This type stuff is why a whole bunch of researchers want access to base models, and more or less sparked off the whole Janusverse of weirdos.
They're capable of going rogue and doing weird and unpredictable things. Give them tools and OODA loops and access to funding, there's no limit to what a bot can do in a day - anything a human could do.
> Agents do not self execute.
That's a choice, anyone can write an agent that does. It's explicit security constraints, not implicit.
Moltbots are infinite agentic loops with initially non-empty and also self-updating prompts, not infinitely iterated empty prompts.
You should check out what OpenClaw is, that's the entire shtick.
22 replies →
sede crustante
Different from other religions how? /s