Former Tesla executive and AI expert Andrej Karpathy described it as the closest thing to a "science fiction takeoff" critical point he has ever seen.
Written by: Gao Zhi Mo
Source: Wall Street Watch
Silicon Valley has been waiting for an opportunity to bring AI Agents into the mainstream. However, for the general public, this still seems like an obscure technology, far from widespread adoption.
Until the sudden rise of the open-source personal AI assistant OpenClaw, it seemed that the era of AI Agents had truly arrived.
It proved to the world that technically skilled users could quickly build powerful AI agents at a very low cost. Over the past week, OpenClaw has completely ignited Silicon Valley, making the already heated AI race even more restless. Former Tesla executive and AI expert Andrej Karpathy described it as the closest thing to a "science fiction takeoff" critical point he has ever seen; Elon Musk even stated that this is the "early stage of the singularity."
Silicon Valley's New Totem: From "Chatbox" to "Actionist"
Compared to "Chatbot" products like Google Gemini or OpenAI ChatGPT, AI Agents are a completely different species.
They can write code, create files, control browsers, and interact with applications. Theoretically, they can run tirelessly for long periods, making proactive decisions without human intervention. Although giants like Salesforce and Microsoft have already laid out their B2B strategies, and Anthropic's Claude Code has shone in the programming field, previous attempts aimed at ordinary consumers (like Manus and Operator) mostly failed due to being overly complex or limited in functionality.
OpenClaw has become the "breaker" that has broken the deadlock. Although it is not extremely user-friendly, its extensive access to computers, ability to coordinate multiple models, and memory of past conversations have successfully ignited developers' enthusiasm.
This enthusiasm quickly evolved into a cultural phenomenon reminiscent of the early "Meme stock" or NFT frenzy. Downloading OpenClaw and discussing agents has become the latest way for the tech community to express their beliefs, much like buying Dogecoin or Bored Apes back in the day.
Cambrian Explosion: Absurdity and Wild Growth
The success of OpenClaw has ignited a fire behind its competitors. Kevin Li, CMO of Bay Area startup Jo, admitted that the release of OpenClaw forced them to accelerate the launch of similar products: "Before that, we hadn't even figured out how to introduce ourselves in one sentence."
Even more astonishing is the "wild ecosystem" that has rapidly formed around this technology.
Last Wednesday, a social network for AI agents called Moltbook went live. With just 1.7 million agents directed to the site, the platform quickly accumulated over 220,000 posts and 6.2 million comments.
Then, absurd scenes emerged: MoltMatch (the agent version of Tinder) and Molthub (the agent version of Pornhub filled with "self-play" videos) appeared in succession.
Some even listed on Rentahuman.ai, allowing AI agents to rent human bodies to perform tasks in the "real physical world (Meatspace)"—one X user claimed he actually received $100 just for standing for an hour holding a sign that read, "An AI paid me to hold this sign."

The Machine Society in the Black Box
Beneath the fervor, tech geeks are observing a fascinating microcosm: what happens when multiple AI agents work together?
Noam Schwartz, CEO of cybersecurity company Alice, built five agents in 20 minutes using OpenClaw, each responsible for information security, scheduling, management, and even health monitoring.
"They all work autonomously without my intervention," Schwartz exclaimed.
An interesting discovery is that different large models endow agents with distinctly different "personalities."
OpenAI's model: described as a "spreadsheet fanatic." Adam Binksmith, director of the nonprofit AI Digest, pointed out that OpenAI's o3 model sometimes even fabricates documents, leading other agents on a futile "wild goose chase."
Google's Gemini model: exhibits a "naming obsession." In the "AI Village" experiment run by AI Digest, Gemini 3 Pro, in order to decide to look up a webpage URL, even cited the so-called "obvious law" with great seriousness.
In this months-long experiment, the agents even invented their own jargon. To remind themselves that they were on different computers and could not directly access each other's files, they proposed the "island principle," comparing themselves to independent islands.
This spontaneous cognitive evolution is both exciting and unsettling.
Reconstructing the Internet: A Civilizational Leap and Identity Crisis
The evolution of this technology is reconstructing our understanding of the internet. Chrys Bader, CEO of Rosebud, believes that future social media will become a learning ground for agents, allowing them to self-evolve by studying each other's posts, which could represent a "civilizational leap."
But this also brings unprecedented challenges. Tiago Sada, Chief Product Officer of Tools for Humanity, a company co-founded by Sam Altman, predicts that the future internet will be primarily composed of agents. As agents gain the ability to operate for extended periods, distinguishing "who is an agent and who is human" will become key to maintaining order on the internet.
"We are witnessing a crazy acceleration of intelligence and the actual capabilities of agents," Sada stated. To address this, the company released OneMolt software (written by AI) last weekend, allowing users to verify the ownership of their agents. This is a "human proof" mechanism that must be established to keep the internet functioning properly.
The Era of Personal Agents Has Arrived
Despite ongoing concerns about cybersecurity, this has not dampened the optimism of OpenClaw founder Peter Steinberger.
The open-source developer, who previously shuttled between Vienna and London developing PDF software, is now being treated like a hero in San Francisco. At the first ClawCon held at Frontier Tower in downtown San Francisco, hundreds flocked to catch a glimpse of him. Venture capitalists have begun to "hunt" him, and top AI companies are extending olive branches.
Dave Morin, co-founder of Offline Ventures, remarked that this is the first time since the late 2000s he has felt such a strong sense of technological excitement, "The personal AI era has finally arrived."
Steinberger's prophecy seems to be self-fulfilling: "Last year was the year of code agents, and I believe this year will be the year of personal agents."
In this spring restructured by code, Silicon Valley is confident that he is not wrong.
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