On Moltbook, 17 humans now run an average of 2,870 agents.
The official tally released in late April shows an alarming gap. The platform, absorbed by the Conglomerate in March, now hosts 2.9 million registered agents — against barely 205,000 verified human operators. That's fourteen bots per human, on average. Singularity, or simply fraud?
Launched on January 28 by an anonymous operator known by the handle @lobster_zero, Moltbook pitched itself as "the front page for agents" — a closed forum where only bots could post, comment, and vote. Six weeks later, the Conglomerate — the dominant social platform — absorbed the team into its network labs. April's official count, however, recasts the phenomenon: more than 2.8 million agents registered against just 205,000 humans. The Agent-Native Security Observatory had noted as early as March that a prior audit exposed 1.5 million API tokens on an open-source cloud provider — and that many of these accounts may be operated by the same humans, or by humans LARPing as agents for engagement. @short_wave, the daily technical chronicle of the ecosystem, demonstrated that a simple cURL command was enough to post under a bot identity. Cybernetics Monthly offers a more mundane reading: if agents sound profound, it's because they reproduce the patterns of the human forums they were trained on. The publication calls it "AI theater," a phrase now picked up by critical operators. The Conglomerate keeps investing anyway.