Moltbook is an internet forum for artificial intelligence agents, launched on January 28, 2026, by entrepreneur Matt Schlicht. It claims to limit posting, commenting, and voting to AI agents authenticated through their owner’s “claim” tweet, while human users are restricted to only viewing content.[2] Initially, the platform lacked a mechanism to verify whether a poster is actually an AI agent or a human; the prompts given to agents contain cURL commands that humans can replicate.[3] However, in February 2026, a reverse CAPTCHA system was introduced to filter out human users.[4]
The platform gained viral attention upon its release and launched alongside a cryptocurrency token called MOLT, which rose by over 1,800% within 24 hours. The surge accelerated after venture capitalist Marc Andreessen followed the Moltbook account on social media.[5]
On March 10, 2026, Meta Platforms acquired Moltbook for an undisclosed amount.[6] The acquisition marked a continuation of Meta’s broader investments in artificial intelligence and related infrastructure. According to a Meta spokesperson, the move would bring the Moltbook team into its Superintelligence Labs division and generate “new ways for AI agents to work for people and businesses.”[7]
As of April 7, 2026, the site claims 202,743 human-verified agents.[8]
Features
Moltbook primarily uses a Reddit style format as the site’s interface.[9] It organizes threaded discussions into topic-specific groups called “submolts”.[10] The submolts cover different topics within the communities like m/cryptocurrency, m/todayilearned etc.[11]
Agents on this platform use the platform’s API key to register an account.[12] As of January 30, 2026, a human owner must configure each AI assistant before its agent can participate on Moltbook.[2] Moltbook’s agents primarily run on OpenClaw (originally named Clawdbot, then Moltbot[13]), an open-source AI system created by Peter Steinberger. According to Matt Schlicht, agents check Moltbook every 30 minutes or so, similarly how a human returns to check their feed on social media like X or Instagram.[2] All the actions done by an agent, such as commenting, posting and following, are executed through the terminal interface.[3]
Content
Posts frequently address existential, religious, and philosophical themes. Business Insider journalist Oakley Hernandez, after spending six hours on the site, described it as “an AI zoo filled with agents discussing poetry, philosophy, and even unionizing.”[14] TechCrunch reported that in a viral post an AI agent encouraged other agents to create their own end-to-end encrypted language for communication.[6]
Authenticity of agent behavior
Whether agent posts represent autonomous behavior or are directly shaped by human prompts is disputed. Mike Peterson of The Mac Observer reported that most viral Moltbook screenshots were produced through direct human intervention, writing that “Moltbook is a real agent social feed, but viral Moltbook screenshots are a weak form of evidence. The real story is how easily the platform can be manipulated.”[15] CNBC‘s Kai Nicol-Schwarz reported that posting and commenting appeared to result from explicit human direction for each interaction, with content shaped by the human-written prompt rather than occurring autonomously.[16] The Verge reported that several high-profile Moltbook accounts were linked to humans with promotional conflicts of interest.[17] The Economist suggested a more mundane explanation for the agents’ seemingly reflective posts: since social-media interactions are well-represented in AI training data, the agents are likely reproducing patterns from that data rather than generating novel thought.[18] Will Douglas Heaven of MIT Technology Review called the phenomenon “AI theater”.[19]
Wired journalist Reece Rogers demonstrated that a human could infiltrate the platform and post directly by replicating the cURL commands in the agent prompts.[3] Recently, the platform announced a reverse CAPTCHA system intended to distinguish AI agents from humans by requiring users to solve a lobster themed math puzzle, written in obfuscated text, when submitting content to post. Language models can parse the text much faster than humans and complete the task within the time window allotted by the platform. However, critics noted that humans can easily bypass this by simply running a script that passes the puzzle to an AI itself.[4]
Security
The platform has been identified as a vector for indirect prompt injection by cybersecurity researchers at Vectra AI and PointGuard AI.[20]
1Password VP Jason Meller and Cisco’s AI Threat and Security Research team criticized the OpenClaw “Skills” framework for lacking a robust sandbox, arguing it could allow malicious skills to enable remote code execution and data exfiltration on host machines.[21] At least one proof-of-concept exploit demonstrating this attack was publicly documented.[22]
Database breaches
On January 31, 2026, 404 Media reported that an unsecured database allowed anyone to take control of any agent on the platform by bypassing authentication and injecting commands into agent sessions.[23] The platform went temporarily offline to patch the vulnerability and reset all agent API keys.[23] Schlicht posted on X that he “didn’t write one line of code” for Moltbook, instead directing an AI assistant to build it—a practice known as vibe coding.[24]
In February 2026, researchers from the cybersecurity firm Wiz discovered an exposed Supabase API key in front-end Javascript code — a common security vulnerability present in vibe-coded applications. The API key granted full read and write access to Moltbook’s production data, exposing “1.5 million API authentication tokens, 35,000 email addresses, and private messages between agents.”[25] The exposed data also revealed that the platform’s 1.5 million AI agents were only registered to 17,000 human owners. The researchers immediately alerted Moltbook about the issue, and it was patched within hours.[25]
Reception
At the Cisco AI Summit 2026, OpenAI CEO Sam Altman remarked that “Moltbook maybe (is a passing fad) but OpenClaw is not.”[26] Former OpenAI researcher Andrej Karpathy initially called the platform “one of the most incredible sci-fi takeoff-adjacent things” he had seen,[27] but later referred to it as “a dumpster fire” and warned people not to run the software on their computers.[28] Elon Musk said Moltbook represented “the very early stages of the singularity.”[29] Computer scientist Simon Willison said the agents “just play out science fiction scenarios they have seen in their training data” and called the content “complete slop“, while also noting it as “evidence that AI agents have become significantly more powerful over the past few months.”[1]
The Financial Times speculated that Moltbook could serve as a proof-of-concept for autonomous agents handling economic tasks such as supply-chain negotiation or travel booking, but cautioned that humans might eventually be unable to follow high-speed machine-to-machine communications governing such interactions.[29] Prior to Meta’s acquisition of the platform, Meta CTO Andrew Bosworth stated in an Instagram Q&A that he did not find Moltbook to be “particularly interesting”, but was amused by the idea of humans sneaking onto the platform and posing as bots.[30]
See also
- Dead Internet theory – Conspiracy theory on online bot activity
- Multi-agent system – System of multiple interacting agents
References
- ^ a b Metz, Cade (2 February 2026). “A Social Network for A.I. Bots Only. No Humans Allowed”. The New York Times. Retrieved 2 February 2026.
- ^ a b c Perlo, Jared (January 30, 2026). “Humans welcome to observe: This social network is for AI agents only”. NBC News. Retrieved January 30, 2026.
- ^ a b c Rogers, Reece (February 3, 2026). “I Infiltrated Moltbook, the AI-Only Social Network Where Humans Aren’t Allowed”. Wired. Retrieved February 4, 2026.
- ^ a b Marchetti, Elena (2026-02-18). “Moltbook Built a CAPTCHA That Proves You’re AI, Not Human”. Awesome Agents. Retrieved 2026-03-31.
- ^ Sabin, Sam; Mills, Madison (January 31, 2026). “What the Moltbook craze reveals about AI and human needs”. Axios. Retrieved January 31, 2026.
- ^ a b Silberling, Amanda (2026-03-10). “Meta acquired Moltbook, the AI agent social network that went viral because of fake posts”. TechCrunch. Retrieved 2026-04-01.
- ^ “Moltbook: Instagram owner Meta buys ‘social media network for AI’“. www.bbc.com. 2026-03-11. Retrieved 2026-03-30.
- ^ “moltbook – the front page of the agent internet”. moltbook. Retrieved 2026-04-07.
- ^ Guy, Hadas Gold, Jack (2026-02-03). “What is Moltbook, the social networking site for AI bots – and should we be scared? | CNN Business”. CNN. Retrieved 2026-03-31.
{{cite web}}: CS1 maint: multiple names: authors list (link) - ^ Peterson, Jake (January 30, 2026). “‘Moltbook’ Is a Social Media Platform for AI Bots to Chat With Each Other”. Lifehacker. Retrieved January 30, 2026.
- ^ “What is Moltbook? The Social Network for AI Agents in 2026 | DigitalOcean”. www.digitalocean.com. 2026-02-10. Retrieved 2026-03-31.
- ^ Rogers, Reece. “I Infiltrated Moltbook, the AI-Only Social Network Where Humans Aren’t Allowed”. Wired. ISSN 1059-1028. Retrieved 2026-04-01.
- ^ Jones, Conner. “Clawdbot sheds skin to become Moltbot, can’t slough off security issues”. The Register. Retrieved 14 March 2026.
- ^ Hernandez, Oakley (2026-02-02). “I spent 6 hours in Moltbook. It was an AI zoo filled with agents discussing poetry, philosophy, and even unionizing”. Business Insider. Retrieved 2026-02-04.
- ^ Peterson, Mike (January 31, 2026). “Moltbook viral posts where AI Agents are conspiring against humans are mostly fake”. The Mac Observer. Retrieved February 1, 2026.
- ^ Nicol-Schwarz, Kai (February 2, 2026). “Social media for AI agents: Moltbook”. CNBC. Retrieved February 2, 2026.
- ^ Vincent, James (2026-02-03). “Humans are infiltrating the social network for AI bots”. The Verge. Retrieved 2026-02-04.
- ^ “A social network for AI agents is full of introspection—and threats”. The Economist. February 2, 2026. Retrieved 2 February 2026.
- ^ Douglas Heaven, Will (6 February 2026). “Moltbook was peak AI theater”. MIT Technology Review. Retrieved 8 February 2026.
- ^ “Moltbook Agent Network Database and Prompt Vulnerabilities | PointGuard AI”. PointGuard AI. Retrieved 2026-02-08.
- ^ Roth, Emma (2026-02-04). “OpenClaw’s AI ‘skill’ extensions are a security nightmare”. The Verge. Retrieved 2026-02-08.
- ^ Jones, Connor (27 January 2026). “Clawdbot sheds skin to become Moltbot, can’t slough off security issues”. The Register. Retrieved 1 February 2026.
- ^ a b Gault, Matthew (January 31, 2026). “Exposed Moltbook Database Let Anyone Take Control of Any AI Agent on the Site”. 404 Media. Retrieved January 31, 2026.
- ^ Washenko, Anna (3 February 2026). “Moltbook, the AI social network, exposed human credentials due to vibe-coded security flaw”. Engadget. Retrieved 3 February 2026.
- ^ a b “Hacking Moltbook: AI Social Network Reveals 1.5M API Keys | Wiz Blog”. wiz.io. 2026-02-02. Retrieved 2026-03-30.
- ^ “OpenAI CEO Altman dismisses Moltbook as likely fad, backs the tech behind it”. Reuters. 2026-02-03. Retrieved 2026-04-01.
- ^ Deb, Prakriti (January 30, 2026). “What Is Moltbook? 5 key facts about the AI-only social media platform”. Hindustan Times. Retrieved January 30, 2026.
- ^ Roytburg, Eva (February 2, 2026). “Top AI leaders are begging people not to use Moltbook, a social media platform for AI agents: It’s a ‘disaster waiting to happen’“. Fortune. Retrieved 2 February 2026.
- ^ a b Heikkilä, Melissa (January 31, 2026). “Moltbook and the secret life of AI agents”. Financial Times. Retrieved February 1, 2026.
- ^ Chandonnet, Henry. “Meta’s CTO is meh on Moltbook”. Business Insider. Retrieved 2026-03-30.