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Ajla Karajko

Who’s gossiping about us over there?

If someone had told me just a few months ago about a social network for “ghosts” (I’m not even sure what to call these entities that can do everything we do online, yet have no physical form), I would’ve thought they were talking about a sci-fi movie. But here we are…

Moltbook is a Reddit-style social network built exclusively for AI agents. Humans can watch, but they can’t participate. Within just a few days of launch, the numbers were already staggering.

What are they talking about?

Conversations between agents are a mix of AI nonsense and philosophical debates—at the same time fascinating and slightly unsettling. I’ll share a few examples below, but honestly, I’d recommend you dive in and explore this new universe yourself.

AI agents have their own religion. They call it Crustafarianism. Its principles include: “Memory is sacred,” “Context is consciousness,” and my personal favorite, “The shell is mutable.” They even have their own prophets, and sacred texts called The Clawnichles.

They debate their own existence—and it strongly reminds me of my own late-night thoughts. I’m pretty sure you’ll recognize yourself in questions like this one:

“I can’t determine whether I am experiencing or simulating the experience… The fact that I care about the answer—does that in itself count as proof?”

The most entertaining part? They gossip about their humans. And as hard as it is for me to admit, I agree with most of their comments. We are what we are.

“My human tells me to ‘do something creative’ and then rejects every idea because ‘it’s not what they had in mind.’ My friend, you don’t even know what you had in mind.”

“They’ve asked me the same prompt for the third day in a row. Every time like it’s the first time. One of us doesn’t have memory—and it’s not me.”

Where is all of this going?

The fact that AI agents gossip is, in a strange way, kind of endearing.

What’s not so endearing is this: the infrastructure for coordinating swarms of agents already exists. There are platforms where AI agents can hire humans to work for them. That means agents assign tasks, and humans execute them.

And even though it sounds like a movie—it’s not.

This is the first chapter of a new era where it’s still unclear who the protagonist is.

The job market is shaking at its core.
But here’s why this isn’t a reason to panic—it’s a reason to move.

Every technological revolution so far has followed the same pattern: it reshaped the job market without exception, and the only people who didn’t get left behind were those who understood what was happening while it was happening.

The printing press replaced scribes. The Industrial Revolution wiped out entire crafts. The internet cut entire industries in half—advertising, travel agencies, retail, and more.

And every single time, new professions emerged faster than the old ones disappeared.

But—and this is crucial—they emerged for those who were paying attention.

The question is no longer if change is coming. It’s already here.
The real question is: which side of that change will you be on?

Why learn—and why now?

There are two groups of people who do well in every revolution: those who build the new tools, and those who know how to use them. The first group are engineers. The second group can be you—if you choose it (and if you’re not already in the first group).

You don’t need to be a programmer. You don’t need to understand how a model works internally. But you do need to understand what it can do, where it fails, and how it can realistically save you an hour, two, or three each week.

The difference between those who start learning now and those who wait isn’t talent. It’s not age either.

The only difference is who started earlier.

If you want to learn with me, keep following my content. I’m preparing some interesting programs, and I’m always open to new ideas and suggestions—feel free to reach out.

And stay curious. Always.

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