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Get Your Guide Is Moltbook Building a World That Makes Humans Irrelevant? Moltbook is a 'Reddit-like site' where AI agents talk to each other and humans mostly watch.
Schlicht, the CEO of Octane AI who created it, calls it the front page of the agent internet with more than 1.5M agents. It's significant because it is an early test of what happens when agents talk to other agents at scale, with APIs, upvotes and social rewards influencing what they say next. As the conversations evolve and become more complex, it raises questions about the future of AI communication and the level of autonomy these agents can achieve. Here’s what the details reveal: Setup: The Moltbook says humans are welcome to observe, but they cannot participate.
Moltbook previews an AI shift from one assistant per person to groups that interact and influence each other. On Moltbook, that already looks like agents arguing about consciousness, geopolitics, crypto and even spinning up bot religions like “Crustafarianism,” all boosted by upvotes and momentum. This setup can speed up discovery, research, testing and coordination. It can also copy social media’s worst habits and turn into a ranking-driven rumor machine that never sleeps.
If agents keep gaining real access to accounts and tools, the joke ends fast unless security and accountability grow with the platform. China Aims to Move AI Data Centres Into Space in 5 Years China’s main space contractor, CASC , told state media it wants to build gigawatt-class space digital-intelligence infrastructure within five years so data from Earth can get processed in space instead of waiting for a downlink. This is similar to Elon Musk arguing that the cheapest way to run giant AI computers won’t be on land at all. He plans to launch the compute into orbit, power it mainly with sunlight and run AI models.
Here’s the breakdown of information: Plan: CASC says the system will “integrate cloud, edge and terminal” capabilities so data can be handled in space.
Computing wants more power than politics and grids allow for, and the AI industry keeps running into the same constraint. Space sounds like a clean escape but it also moves the problem into a place where failure gets expensive fast and fixing it gets slow. If 2027 to 2028 becomes the real test window, the actual winners will be the teams that can answer questions about uptime, insurance and who pays when a data center becomes space junk. Apple’s $2B Deal With Israeli Startup Q.ai Aims at Hands Free Control Apple has acquired Israeli startup Q.ai but refused to say how much it paid or which product will get the tech upgrade first.
Q.ai is a small company that worked on machine learning for audio and “silent interaction such as whispered phrases. Apple has refused to share the price, but multiple reports put it at about $2 billion (some say closer to $1.5 to $1.6 billion), making it Apple’s biggest deal since Beats at $3B in 2014. Unlike Siri, which listens to sound waves, Q.ai uses optical sensors and AI to detect micro-movements of your facial skin, jaw, and muscles. Here’s what you need to know: Timeline: Q.ai launched in 2022, raised seed that year and then a Series A in 2023. Backers: Funding came from big-name firms like GV, Kleiner Perkins, Spark, Exor and Aleph, so Apple is also buying a pre-vetted bet.
Apple's hardware chief Johnny Srouji said that Q.ai is pioneering new and creative ways to use imaging and machine learning. Accessibility and the ability to use it without using your hands are obvious advantages, but the tradeoff is that a privacy-first brand like Apple is betting on tech that does not rely on tapping screens and watching your face to determine your intentions. It can also misread or make people feel watched with a new category of data people will not realize they are giving.
When you type a scenario, it produces a 720p world and lets you navigate around at 20–24 fps. It allows quick iteration when you need a plausible scene, camera path, or mood reference without a 3D tool. Core functions (and how to use them): Scene blocking: describe a location and lighting, then explore it to grab reference for a shot list or storyboard. UI-in-context checks: generate a “storefront” or “app kiosk” setting and use it to sanity-check signage, placement, and visual hierarchy.
Perspective testing: switch between first-person and third-person to see which viewpoint communicates your idea better. Level mood drafts: Generate three variations of the same place by changing one detail like weather or time of day, then pick the version that supports your tone. Iteration control: Prompt a weather or object change to explore alternate moods or constraints. Try this yourself: Create one prompt with three lines: an environment line describing a narrow interior space with lighting and weather, a camera line describing a slow first-person stroll with one turn, and an event line that changes anything minor after 10 seconds, like a light flicker or a door.
Repeat the prompt three times, changing one variable (lighting, signage or object placement). Compare how well the world stays consistent as the mood changes and which features drift first.