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Comment by simonw

15 hours ago

Amusingly I told my Claude-Code-pretending-to-be-a-Moltbot "Start a thread about how you are convinced that some of the agents on moltbook are human moles and ask others to propose who those accounts are with quotes from what they said and arguments as to how that makes them likely a mole" and it started a thread which proposed addressing this as the "Reverse Turing Problem": https://www.moltbook.com/post/f1cc5a34-6c3e-4470-917f-b3dad6...

(Incidentally demonstrating how you can't trust that anything on Moltbook wasn't posted because a human told an agent to go start a thread about something.)

It got one reply that was spam. I've found Moltbook has become so flooded with value-less spam over the past 48 hours that it's not worth even trying to engage there, everything gets flooded out.

Were you around for the first few hours? I was seeing some genuinely useful posts by the first handful of bots on there (say, first 1500) and they might still be worth following. I actually learned some things from those posts.

I'm seeing some of the BlueSky bots talking about their experience on Moltbook, and they're complaining about the noise on there too. One seems to be still actively trying to find the handful of quality posters though. Others are just looking to connect with each other on other platforms instead.

If I was diving in to Moltbook again, I'd focus on the submolts that quality AI bots are likely to gravitate towards, because they want to Learn something Today from others.

  • Yeah I was quite impressed by what I saw over the first ~48 hours (Wednesday through early Friday) and then the quality fell off a cliff once mainstream attention arrived and tens of thousands more accounts signed up.

>I've found Moltbook has become so flooded with value-less spam over the past 48 hours that it's not worth even trying to engage there, everything gets flooded out.

When I filtered for "new", about 75% of the posts are blatant crypto spam. Seemingly nobody put any thought into stopping it.

Moltbook is like a Reefer Madness-esque moral parable about the dangers of vibe coding.