7.4 C
Munich
星期六, 4 4 月, 2026

Why the Moltbook frenzy was like Pokémon

Must read

Demand for the Unihertz Titan 2 Elite hits a very impressive level

Demand for the Titan 2 Elite on Kickstarter shows that demand remains for smartphones with a physical keyboard. #Demand #Unihertz #Titan #Elite #hits #impressive #level

Mum with ‘Britain’s biggest boobs’ says men beg her to ‘do hot pilates on camera’

A mum with “the largest boobs in Britain” says she is bombarded with messages from creepy blokes who beg her to do “hot pilates”...

The OnePlus 15 continues to sell like hotcakes at this rare discount

Amazon still sells the OnePlus 15 at its Spring Sale discount, but probably not for much longer. #OnePlus #continues #sell #hotcakes #rare #discount

Football legend’s ‘oldest Playboy model’ ex fumed at Tinder and Hinge pics storm

A football legend's former girlfriend, who became Scotland's oldest Playboy model, was left fuming after discovering his racy pictures were being used to trick...

The whole experiment reminded our senior editor for AI, Will Douglas Heaven, of something far less interesting: Pokémon.

Back in 2014, someone set up a game of Pokémon in which the main character could be controlled by anyone on the internet via the streaming platform Twitch. Playing was as clunky as it sounds, but it was incredibly popular: at one point, a million people were playing the game at the same time.

“It was yet another weird online social experiment that got picked up by the mainstream media: What did this mean for the future?” Will says. “Not a lot, it turned out.”

The frenzy about Moltbook struck a similar tone to Will, and it turned out that one of the sources he spoke to had been thinking about Pokémon too. Jason Schloetzer, at the Georgetown Psaros Center for Financial Markets and Policy, saw the whole thing as a sort of Pokémon battle for AI enthusiasts, in which they created AI agents and deployed them to interact with other agents. In this light, the news that many AI agents were actually being instructed by people to say certain things that made them sound sentient or intelligent makes a whole lot more sense. 

“It’s basically a spectator sport,” he told Will, “but for language models.”

Will wrote an excellent piece about why Moltbook was not the glimpse into the future that it was said to be. Even if you are excited about a future of agentic AI, he points out, there are some key pieces that Moltbook made clear are still missing. It was a forum of chaos, but a genuinely helpful hive mind would require more coordination, shared objectives, and shared memory.

“More than anything else, I think Moltbook was the internet having fun,” Will says. “The biggest question that now leaves me with is: How far will people push AI just for the laughs?”

Read the whole story.

#Moltbook #frenzy #Pokémon

- Advertisement -

More articles

LEAVE A REPLY

Please enter your comment!
Please enter your name here

- Advertisement -

Latest article

Demand for the Unihertz Titan 2 Elite hits a very impressive level

Demand for the Titan 2 Elite on Kickstarter shows that demand remains for smartphones with a physical keyboard. #Demand #Unihertz #Titan #Elite #hits #impressive #level

Mum with ‘Britain’s biggest boobs’ says men beg her to ‘do hot pilates on camera’

A mum with “the largest boobs in Britain” says she is bombarded with messages from creepy blokes who beg her to do “hot pilates”...

The OnePlus 15 continues to sell like hotcakes at this rare discount

Amazon still sells the OnePlus 15 at its Spring Sale discount, but probably not for much longer. #OnePlus #continues #sell #hotcakes #rare #discount

Football legend’s ‘oldest Playboy model’ ex fumed at Tinder and Hinge pics storm

A football legend's former girlfriend, who became Scotland's oldest Playboy model, was left fuming after discovering his racy pictures were being used to trick...

Huawei's banned Mate 80 Pro just solved big phones' biggest problem

This is how AI can be truly useful. #Huawei039s #banned #Mate #Pro #solved #big #phones039 #biggest #problem