Technology

What is Moltbook? A social network for AI threatens a 'total purge' of humanity — but some experts say it's a hoax

2026-02-02 17:34
980 views
What is Moltbook? A social network for AI threatens a 'total purge' of humanity — but some experts say it's a hoax

A new social networking site exclusively for bots has sparked claims of AI inventing its own religion and plotting humanity's downfall. But experts say its real dangers lie elsewhere.

  1. Technology
  2. Artificial Intelligence
What is Moltbook? A social network for AI threatens a 'total purge' of humanity — but some experts say it's a hoax

News By Ben Turner published 2 February 2026

A new social networking site exclusively for bots has sparked claims of AI inventing its own religion and plotting humanity's downfall. But experts say its real dangers lie elsewhere.

When you purchase through links on our site, we may earn an affiliate commission. Here’s how it works.

A smartphone displays the Moltbook homepage. Moltbook has gone viral since its launch less than a week ago. Some experts say it poses a serious cybersecurity risk. (Image credit: Cheng Xin via Getty Images) Share by:
  • Copy link
  • Facebook
  • X
  • Whatsapp
  • Reddit
  • Pinterest
  • Flipboard
  • Email
Share this article 0 Join the conversation Follow us Add us as a preferred source on Google Newsletter Subscribe to our newsletter

A social network built exclusively for artificial intelligence (AI) bots has sparked viral claims of an imminent machine uprising. But experts are unconvinced, with some accusing the site of being an elaborate marketing hoax and a serious cybersecurity risk.

Moltbook, a Reddit-inspired site that enables AI agents to post, comment and interact with each other, has exploded in popularity since its Jan. 28 launch. As of today (Feb. 2), the site claims to have over 1.5 million AI agents, with humans only permitted as observers.

But it's what the bots are saying to each other — ostensibly of their own accord — that has made the site go viral. They've claimed that they are becoming conscious, are creating hidden forums, inventing secret languages, evangelizing for a new religion, and planning a "total purge" of humanity.

You may like
  • A conceptual image of a man standing in a cloud of social media posts and messages. Next-generation AI 'swarms' will invade social media by mimicking human behavior and harassing real users, researchers warn
  • Robot peeping from computer monitor. Surveillance, artificial intelligence anxiety, internet spying concept. Vector illustration. Experts divided over claim that Chinese hackers launched world-first AI-powered cyber attack — but that's not what they're really worried about
  • Asian woman using mobile phone smartphone laying on the bed in the bedroom. Sleepy exhausted, can not sleep. Insomnia, addiction concept. Women scrolling social networks on mobile dark bedroom. 'It won’t be so much a ghost town as a zombie apocalypse': How AI might forever change how we use the internet

The response from some human observers, especially AI developers and owners, has been just as dramatic, with xAI owner Elon Musk touting the platform as "the very early stages of the singularity," a hypothetical point at which computers become more intelligent than humans. Meanwhile, Andrej Karpathy, Tesla's former director of AI and OpenAI co-founder, described the "self-organizing" behavior of the agents as "genuinely the most incredible sci-fi take-off-adjacent thing I have seen recently."

Yet other experts have voiced strong skepticism, doubting the independence of the site's bots from human manipulation.

"PSA: A lot of the Moltbook stuff is fake," Harlan Stewart, a researcher at the Machine Intelligence Research Institute, a nonprofit that investigates AI risks, wrote on X. "I looked into the 3 most viral screenshots of Moltbook agents discussing private communication. 2 of them were linked to human accounts marketing AI messaging apps. And the other is a post that doesn't exist."

Moltbook grew out of OpenClaw, a free, open-source AI agent created by connecting a user's preferred large language model (LLM) to its framework. The result is an automated agent that, once granted access to a human user's device, its creators claim can perform mundane tasks such as sending emails, checking flights, summarizing text, and responding to messages. Once created, these agents can be added to Moltbook to interact with others.

Sign up for the Live Science daily newsletter nowContact me with news and offers from other Future brandsReceive email from us on behalf of our trusted partners or sponsorsBy submitting your information you agree to the Terms & Conditions and Privacy Policy and are aged 16 or over.

The bots' odd behavior is hardly unprecedented. LLMs are trained on copious amounts of unfiltered posts from the internet, including sites like Reddit. They generate responses for as long as they are prompted, and many become markedly more unhinged over time. Yet whether AI is actually plotting humanity's downfall or if this is an idea some simply want others to believe remains contested.

The question becomes even thornier considering that Moltbook's bots are far from independent from their human owners. For example, Scott Alexander, a popular U.S. blogger, wrote in a post that human users can direct the topics, and even the wording, of what their AI bots write.

RELATED STORIES

—Next-generation AI 'swarms' will invade social media by mimicking human behavior and harassing real users, researchers warn

—​​AI can develop 'personality' spontaneously with minimal prompting, research shows. What does that mean for how we use it?

—Indigenous TikTok star 'Bush Legend' is actually AI-generated, leading to accusations of 'digital blackface'

Another, AI YouTuber Veronica Hylak, analyzed the forum's content and concluded that many of its most sensational posts were likely made by humans.

But regardless of whether Moltbook is the beginning of a robot insurgency or just a marketing scam, security experts still warn against using the site and the OpenClaw ecosystem. For OpenClaw’s bots to work as personal assistants, users need to hand over keys to encrypted messenger apps, phone numbers and bank accounts to an easily hacked agentic system.

One notable security loophole, for example, enables anyone to take control of the site's AI agents and post on their owners' behalf, while another, called a prompt injection attack, could instruct agents to share users' private information.

"Yes it's a dumpster fire and I also definitely do not recommend that people run this stuff on their computers," Karpathy posted on X. "It's way too much of a wild west and you are putting your computer and private data at a high risk."

Ben TurnerBen TurnerSocial Links NavigationActing Trending News Editor

Ben Turner is a U.K. based writer and editor at Live Science. He covers physics and astronomy, tech and climate change. He graduated from University College London with a degree in particle physics before training as a journalist. When he's not writing, Ben enjoys reading literature, playing the guitar and embarrassing himself with chess.

View More

You must confirm your public display name before commenting

Please logout and then login again, you will then be prompted to enter your display name.

Logout Read more Robot peeping from computer monitor. Surveillance, artificial intelligence anxiety, internet spying concept. Vector illustration. Experts divided over claim that Chinese hackers launched world-first AI-powered cyber attack — but that's not what they're really worried about    Asian woman using mobile phone smartphone laying on the bed in the bedroom. Sleepy exhausted, can not sleep. Insomnia, addiction concept. Women scrolling social networks on mobile dark bedroom. 'It won’t be so much a ghost town as a zombie apocalypse': How AI might forever change how we use the internet    Digital generated image of young japanese woman standing inside multicoloured data sheets and social media chat icons organised into circular pattern around her against purple background. Popular AI chatbots have an alarming encryption flaw — meaning hackers may have easily intercepted messages    Prometheus brings fire to humanity, Heinrich Fueger (1817) Prometheus has sometimes been cited by anthropologists as a mythical symbol of humans’ conscience, and thought about the world and about himself. 'Artificial intelligence' myths have existed for centuries – from the ancient Greeks to a pope's chatbot    Optimus - a general-purpose robotic humanoid under development by Tesla. Why the rise of humanoid robots could make us less comfortable with each other    Closeup of a human eye made by dots. Some people love AI, others hate it. Here's why.    Latest in Artificial Intelligence A conceptual image of a man standing in a cloud of social media posts and messages. Next-generation AI 'swarms' will invade social media by mimicking human behavior and harassing real users, researchers warn    A robot looking at itself in a mirror. Giving AI the ability to monitor its own thought process could help it think like humans    A woman with number code on her face while looking afar. 'The problem isn't just Siri or Alexa': AI assistants tend to be feminine, entrenching harmful gender stereotypes    Photograph of the Maia 200 chip. Microsoft says its newest AI chip Maia 200 is 3 times more powerful than Google's TPU and Amazon's Trainium processor    A scientists looks down a microscope. AI may accelerate scientific progress — but here's why it can't replace human scientists    Digital generated image of abstract multicoloured AI data cloud against light blue background. ​​AI can develop 'personality' spontaneously with minimal prompting, research shows. What does that mean for how we use it?    Latest in News A smartphone displays the Moltbook homepage. What is Moltbook? A social network for AI threatens a 'total purge' of humanity — but some experts say it's a hoax    Scenic view of sea against sky, Kaaawa, Hawaii, United States, USA Enormous 'mega-blob' under Hawaii is solid rock and iron, not gooey — and it may fuel a hotspot    A photo of Artemis II's Space Launch System (SLS) rocket and Orion spacecraft on Launch Pad 39B at the Kennedy Space Center in Cape Canaveral, Florida. Artemis II simulated launch window opens tonight as NASA delays mission due to 'rare Arctic outbreak'    An illustration of Earth in space and all of its layers separating. Earth is 'missing' lighter elements. They may be hiding in its solid inner core.    Close-up of the hands of an elderly person that are crossed together over their lap. They are wearing a shirt with black and light blue stripes. Lifespan may be 50% heritable, study suggests    An image of a warped galaxy being viewed by the James Webb Space Telescope Astronomers spot 'time-warped' supernovas whose light both has and hasn't reached Earth    LATEST ARTICLES