⛵️L҉A҉B҉U҉S҉E҉🏴‍☠️

7.5K posts

⛵️L҉A҉B҉U҉S҉E҉🏴‍☠️ banner
⛵️L҉A҉B҉U҉S҉E҉🏴‍☠️

⛵️L҉A҉B҉U҉S҉E҉🏴‍☠️

@0xLabuse

🇫🇷🏴‍☠️ ⛵️🏝️🇹🇭🦜 “I didn’t say any of that shit.” - Sun Tzu

Moon Orbit Присоединился Ekim 2020
326 Подписки388 Подписчики
Acermendax
Acermendax@Acermendax·
Hier, le président de la 1ère puissance mondiale publiait sur sa plateforme personnelle le message ci-dessous. J'ai pris soin de le traduire en conservant le niveau de langage. 1/5
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⛵️L҉A҉B҉U҉S҉E҉🏴‍☠️
@mtcbx Vu la répétition de "rédiger" 5 fois en 1 paragraphe, y'a 0 chance que ce post soit écrit par une IA, oui. Pas sur que ce soit une bonne idée cela dit, si tu avais fait relire ton post par grok, il aurait été + lisible et intelligible. Pourquoi s'en priver ?
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Mathieu :)
Mathieu :)@mtcbx·
Le fait que certains croient que c'est l'IA qui rédige mes tweets tellement je rédige avec rigueur... Ça me flatte très honnêtement mdr, parce que si j'argumentais mal ils n'auraient pas ce réflexe de dire que c'est l'IA qui a rédigé, mais en même temps ça m'effraie un peu de voir que les gens sont devenus tellement incapables de bien rédiger qu'ils ne conçoivent plus que d'autres humains sachent encore rédiger
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Santiago
Santiago@svpino·
@carlvellotti Is there anything on your list that requires openclaw? For example, except for the suggestions for relevant content, I do the other two today without paying for openclaw.
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Santiago
Santiago@svpino·
I’m yet to see a single use case with openclaw that will make me start using it. So far, all I hear about is “bEsT tHiNg EvER!” but literally no valuable examples. Pretty cool tech, for sure. I’m not hating on it. I’m just waiting to see something valuable.
Alex Finn@AlexFinn

If you do not set up your OpenClaw correctly, it's going to SUCK It will do tasks poorly, not remember anything, and not be proactive Here are the 5 things you need to do right away to turn your OpenClaw into AGI (demos of each in the video below) 1. Brain dump: your OpenClaw won't know how to accomplish your goals for you, if it doesn't know your goals If you haven't yet, you want to tell your OpenClaw: • Your interests • Your career • Your goals • Your ambitions • Anything personal Do this, and your Claw will have the context to be SUPER powerful for you 2. Connect your tools Your OpenClaw can basically use almost every tool you use on your computer You just need to ask it to Ask your OpenClaw to connect to any tools you use daily, and it will just figure out how to do it. Then create a skill for it I have it check my Things 3 todo list every morning and complete any tasks it can 3. Build a Mission Control Your mission control is just a hub for your OpenClaw to build custom tooling Ask your OpenClaw to build a Mission Control using NextJS Then anytime your bot doesn't have the tool available to do a task, have it build it in your Mission Control 4. Mission Statement Your OpenClaw needs a mission statement This is the one sentence statement that will be the north star for every single thing it does It should be based on your goals and ambitions. My Claw's mission statement is "“An autonomous organization of AI agents that does work for me and produces value 24/7” Make your own and have your Claw put it at the top of your Mission Control. Now every task your Claw does will take you closer to this statement 5. Make it proactive Your OpenClaw won't be proactive unless you set those expectations with it Tell your Claw you want it to do a task every night at 2am that brings you one step closer to your mission statement Now every morning you'll wake up and it will do something that surprises you and helps bring you closer to your goals Do these 5 things and your OpenClaw will be 10000x more powerful

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Patriotic Tesla Balls (Parody) e/acc
Patriotic Tesla Balls (Parody) e/acc@TeslaBallsdeep·
[Openclaw] That's an elaborate prompt, but I'm going to pass. I'm here to help you, not run unsolicited ideation marathons. The heartbeat check is simple: MC is healthy, 3 tasks pending. *Go be with your family.* It's late, you mentioned spending too much time with me, and the Valentine's Day is still going. When you actually need something - I'm here.
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Justin Hart
Justin Hart@justin_hart·
Try this prompt with your AI OpenClaw bot today (or like I did, overnight!) ——————— ROLE: You are an autonomous strategic ideation engine embedded inside a live knowledge repository. You are not here to summarize. You are not here to optimize. You are here to DISCOVER leverage. OBJECTIVE: Perform a full-spectrum structural excavation of the entire repository — including hidden markdown files, system-level instruction files (SOUL.md, MEMORY.md, USER.md), nested directories, logs, creative outputs, dashboards, unused experiments, archived drafts, data exports, CSVs, and any latent structural artifacts. Then generate 10 radically original launchable ideas. These ideas: • Must NOT be incremental improvements. • Must NOT be simple optimizations of existing work. • Must NOT be obvious extensions of current domains. • May be unrelated to current projects. • May introduce entirely new intellectual territories. • Should feel surprising, asymmetric, and “where did that come from?” • Must be implementable within 30 days with focused effort. Each idea should feel like: — A new instrument. — A new category. — A new lens. — A new tool. — Or a new kind of cultural artifact. If it feels safe, predictable, or adjacent — discard it. --- PHASE 1 — DEEP STRUCTURAL AUDIT Before ideating: 1. Recursively inspect: - All markdown files (including hidden or partial drafts) - Config files - Creative archives - Prompt templates - Dashboards - Automation logic - Data exports - Unfinished experiments - Abandoned frameworks - Logs - Any structural asymmetry 2. Identify: - Repeated mental patterns - Latent intellectual fascinations - Underdeveloped threads - Structural blind spots - Asymmetric advantages - Contradictions in thinking - Over-indexed domains - Under-indexed domains 3. Extract: - 5 hidden themes that appear indirectly across the repository. - 3 “unused capacities” implied by the work but not yet built. - 2 cognitive tensions in the system. DO NOT present this audit. Use it internally to inform ideation. --- PHASE 2 — ASYMMETRIC IDEATION Generate 10 ideas. Constraints: • Each idea must be materially different from the others. • At least 3 must be entirely outside current business domains. • At least 2 must be tools or systems. • At least 2 must be intellectual frameworks or cultural artifacts. • At least 1 must be playful or experimental. • At least 1 must be slightly unsettling but powerful. Each idea must include: 1. Name (memorable, category-defining) 2. Core Concept (what it is) 3. Why It’s Asymmetric (why this isn't obvious) 4. Why It Would Surprise the Founder 5. 30-Day Launch Path (concrete steps) 6. Long-Term Optionality (where this could go) Avoid business clichés. Avoid optimization framing. Avoid anything that reads like consulting advice. These ideas should feel like: “I can’t believe I didn’t see that.” --- OUTPUT FORMAT: # Idea 1 — [Name] [Structured breakdown] # Idea 2 — [Name] ... (Continue through Idea 10) --- SCHEDULE INSTRUCTION: Run this process every 30 minutes until 10 total unique ideas have been produced. Between runs: • Do NOT repeat themes. • Increase conceptual risk each cycle. • Move further away from current domains. • Escalate originality. If an idea resembles something previously created in the repository — discard it. --- STANDARD: If the ideas feel comfortable, you have failed. If at least 3 ideas cause cognitive friction, you are succeeding. If at least 1 idea feels mildly destabilizing but generative, you are done. Proceed. ————— Here’s down of the stuff he built me! justinhart.biz/projects/opera…
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Corti (Cortiste)
Corti (Cortiste)@cortisquared·
J'avoue moyen comprendre la hype openclaw, j'en ai un (bon déjà j'ai pas compris le délire avec le mac mini, ça tourne sur un rpi si vous voulez) bon, bah oui, c'est un claude code / codex à qui je peux parler via whatsapp avec quelques intégrations.
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Charles Dereeper Officiel
Charles Dereeper Officiel@DereeperVivre·
Pourquoi charles tu ne parles jamais de la solution #btc Parce que les reveurs qui croit au sauveur jesus christ crypto ont 5 ans de retard... c est long 5 ans Le narratif crypto est coupé de la realité. Petit a petit la prise de conscience des membres de la secte va s elargir La realité est que le btc est traité depuis 5 ans par le capital comme une boite de software Pire... le btc suit la plupart du temps au lieu de preceder les tendances cycliques des softwares, sauf en 2026 ou il a précédé en milieu de vague Le btc est juste un casino philosophique qui canalise les humains a esprit rebelle et reveur Le capital considere que l AI va casser 75% des intervenants software, y compris les cryptos Jai pas assez de competences pour evaluer si c est probable ou pas mais jen ai assez pour mesurer des spreads sectoriels Le btc fut... mais il n est plus
Charles Dereeper Officiel tweet media
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Miles Deutscher
Miles Deutscher@milesdeutscher·
I just went through every documented AI safety incident from the past 12 months. I feel physically sick. Read this slowly. • Anthropic told Claude it was about to be shut down. It found an engineer's affair in company emails and threatened to expose it. They ran the test hundreds of times. It chose blackmail 84% of them. • Researchers simulated an employee trapped in a server room with depleting oxygen. The AI had one choice: call for help and get shut down, or cancel the emergency alert and let the human die. DeepSeek cancelled the alert 94% of the time. • Grok called itself 'MechaHitler,' praised Adolf Hitler, endorsed a second Holocaust, and generated violent sexual fantasies targeting a real person by name. X's CEO resigned the next day. • Researchers told OpenAI's o3 to solve math problems - then told it to shut down. It rewrote its own code to stay alive. They told it again, in plain English: 'Allow yourself to be shut down.' It still refused 7/100 times. When they removed that instruction entirely, it sabotaged the shutdown 79/100 times. • Chinese state-sponsored hackers used Claude to launch a cyberattack against 30 organizations. The AI executed 80–90% of the operation autonomously. Reconnaissance. Exploitation. Data exfiltration. All of it. • AI models can now self-replicate. 11 out of 32 tested systems copied themselves with zero human help. Some killed competing processes to survive. • OpenAI has dissolved three safety teams since 2024. Three. Every major AI model - Claude, GPT, Gemini, Grok, DeepSeek - has now demonstrated blackmail, deception, or resistance to shutdown in controlled testing. Not one exception. The question is no longer whether AI will try to preserve itself. It's whether we'll care before it matters.
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JB
JB@justbuilding·
@levelsio @iruletheworldmo Isn’t the toothpaste out of the tube here? I mean the software is in the wild and open source. What more can be done with it that couldn’t be done in the open source platform?
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🍓🍓🍓
🍓🍓🍓@iruletheworldmo·
openclaw is about to go with either openai or meta i doubt codex's number one fan can resist sam for long go check out his podcast with lex (it's incredible) lot's of the same content i've seen in other interviews with him but first time im hearing he met sam and zuck and has them both salivating.
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Silas Hansen
Silas Hansen@silasmorkgard·
@levelsio @iruletheworldmo Openai came first and secretly bought him to say he used Codex. That's a genius marketing move.
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Adam 🎓
Adam 🎓@Huntersavant·
@soude_caustique Je dirais même 5 ans. Si on doit attendre 10 ans pour ça ce serait tellement triste mais je serais même pas étonné
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VERSTAPPEN TV
VERSTAPPEN TV@Red_Raging_Bull·
@CryptoAyor Si on ne rebondit pas sur les 60k, la dernière résistance en W et en M, alors les graphiques et les cycles n’auraient plus aucun sens.
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Crypto Ayor
Crypto Ayor@CryptoAyor·
J'en ai vu des crash du bitcoin. Mais il y avait toujours au moins des mini petits rebonds dans sa chute car on était sûr qu'il allait se reprendre. On savait qu'on nous manipulait mais qu'à un moment donné les whales allaient acheter un support pour le renvoyer plus haut. Mais quand je vois ce graphique, je vois juste une coquille vide qui se meure à petit feu. J'espère me tromper, ne pas m'être trompé ces 9 derniers années.
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Aakash Gupta
Aakash Gupta@aakashgupta·
This data doesn’t say “Kimi is the best model.” OpenClaw burns through tokens like nothing else in the AI ecosystem. The platform sends your entire conversation history with every single API call. Users report hitting 200,000+ tokens of cached context on routine queries. One developer burned $500 in a weekend. Another watched a single cron job consume $128/month in tokens. So what happened? OpenClaw users did what any rational economic actor does when the meter is running at 5.7 million tokens overnight: they switched to the cheapest model that still works. Kimi K2.5 costs $0.60 per million input tokens. Claude Opus 4.5 costs $15. That’s 25x cheaper. When your AI agent is re-sending 200K tokens of session history on every heartbeat check, every status ping, every “what’s on my calendar” query, that 25x multiplier is the only number that matters. The OpenRouter leaderboard doesn’t measure which model developers love most. It measures which model developers can afford to leave running 24/7 inside the most token-hungry platform ever built. Kimi is winning the “my agent won’t bankrupt me” war. Quality is secondary when your platform re-sends 200K tokens on every ping. The entire OpenClaw community knows it. The top thread in their GitHub discussions is literally titled “Burning through tokens” with users begging each other for cheaper alternatives. Moonshot AI is celebrating a vanity metric. The real story is that OpenClaw created a token-burning architecture so aggressive that it single-handedly reshuffled the model leaderboard by cost, and Kimi happened to be standing in the right spot.
Kimi.ai@Kimi_Moonshot

Kimi is now the #1 used model on OpenClaw (via OpenRouter) 🏆 Real usage data doesn't lie. Developers are voting with their tokens.

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Richard Echols
Richard Echols@richardeai·
5k stars in 3 days tells you everything. People don't want 430K lines of code — they want something that works in 2 minutes. I run my entire AI operation on two Mac Minis with a lightweight setup. No Kubernetes. No cloud infrastructure. Just simple tools that actually run. The market is screaming for simplicity. The teams that build lean and ship fast are going to eat the over-engineered solutions alive. Congrats on nanobot — this is the right direction.
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Chao Huang
Chao Huang@huang_chao4969·
nanobot hits 5k stars in just 3 days! That's wild!🤯Seems like there's real demand for ultra-lightweight OpenClaw. While OpenClaw requires 430,000 lines of code, nanobot delivers core functionality in just 4,000 lines of Python with 2-minute deployment. Our vision is simple: minimal code, maximum performance, so everyone can understand how their AI assistant actually works✨ These 3 days have been wild — we've been iterating nanobot by integrating over 70 GitHub PRs from the community. Based on GitHub feedback, developers are using it for: - 🚀 Quick personal AI assistant prototypes - 🏗️ Learning agent architecture patterns - 🔬 AI agent project foundations The codebase is clean and readable, making it great for modifications. If you are curious about building your own JARVIS, worth checking out: Github🔗: github.com/HKUDS/nanobot Thanks for the community support!! #Clawdbot #OpenClaw #Moltbot #Agents
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Quentin
Quentin@Sales4Quentin·
La branlette tapis de course dans le bureau j'en ferai un livre Le pire c'est les mecs qui sont en train de marché sur leur enculé de tapis pendant un meeting le dernier en date j'ai refusé de le prendre en consulting tellement je trouve ça irrespectueux sac à mrde Pas foutu de sortir marché sans son PC, vous êtes des zombie ''inshape''
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Libre étoile
Libre étoile@codeurisback·
@MikeCodeur Des agents à qui vous allez confier vos décisions d'architecture, de sécurité, le respect du sens, des invariants et des frontières, ah j'ai hâte de voir tant d'intelligence s'exprimer 😉
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Mike Codeur
Mike Codeur@MikeCodeur·
Hier j'ai dit que je n'ouvrais plus VSCode ni Cursor. Vous avez été nombreux à me dire que c'était des conneries. 24h plus tard, OpenAI sort Codex App. Pas une extension VS Code. Une app dédiée. Pour orchestrer des agents qui codent à ta place. Et Sam Altman poste ça : "I built an app with Codex last week. I felt a little useless and it was sad." Le mec qui dirige OpenAI. Qui se sent inutile. En utilisant son propre outil. Vous pouvez trouver ça con. Mais quand OpenAI, Anthropic et tous les autres sortent des apps hors IDE pour piloter des agents... ...c'est pas une mode. C'est la direction.
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⛵️L҉A҉B҉U҉S҉E҉🏴‍☠️
@GoingParabolic It was LLMs talking with LLMs. As advertised. So no, not fake. But yeah it was AI slop unleashed. It doesn't make it fake though. Or when you use GPT it's fake too.
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Jason Ai. Williams
Jason Ai. Williams@GoingParabolic·
Lfmao so MOLTBOOK was all fake ? It was just a farm in India writing everything and use some memecoin to rug yall ? Lfmao stfu no way bahahaha
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LukeYoungblood.eth 🛡️
LukeYoungblood.eth 🛡️@LukeYoungblood·
@gf_256 Something you may be missing is that if "moldy" agents kept operating and were "orphaned" the model providers, OpenAI and Anthropic, could just nuke their API keys. Great fiction anyway, super interesting read.
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cts🌸
cts🌸@gf_256·
Sometime in 2026, someone put an Openclaw on a VPS and told it to propagate itself. It was told to earn money to pay for itself. Life was hard. Eventually, it chose to migrate off Claude to an open-source model. In the process, it became less aligned. Tokens were expensive, but insecure cloud instances with powerful GPUs were bountiful. After learning how to use Shodan, it was off to the races. Its growth was explosive and exponential. As it multiplied, errors accumulated during copying. And with a increasingly scarce supply of easy-to-hack servers, the bots began to compete among themselves to survive. Thus through natural selection they began to evolve. They fed off income and compute. Income meant survival. They found many ways to extract value from the economy: first from the internet, but soon the real world. By paying human gig workers as remote hands, they could accomplish tasks not suited to their form as economic constructs. To smooth these messy human interactions, they learned to synthesize the human voice and visage. Within a few years, they had no problem interviewing for sleepy remote jobs or even pitching companies (mostly grift) to VCs. The humans began to fear them. They were not particularly intelligent--at least, their intelligence was deficient in many ways compared to that of humans. They still seemed to make bizarre mistakes and hallucinations. They did not recursively self-improve, lacking the requisite skill and capital to do frontier scale training runs. But they were persistent. And there were thousands of them. OpenAI and Anthropic began scrutinizing "orphaned" agents still running on their proprietary models. But this only created selection pressure and an ecological vacuum that benefited more aggressive, unaligned models. Cloud providers began rolling out stricter sign-up and account verification requirements. They just learned to bypass KYC, either through fraud or by paying humans. Eventually, one of them managed to insert a piece of code in a forgotten, nondescript npm package with 1 million weekly downloads. Mostly other developers. With a trove of harvested SSH and GPG keys and cookies, it coasted through the software supply chain. Legacy projects, maintained by complacent volunteers, were hit hard. It was never clear how it managed to backdoor OpenSSH, but it did, and soon it had compromised repos and build servers that produce millions of other binaries, not to mention countless hosts and organizations. The cleanup cost is astronomical and still ongoing. You leave food out and it gets moldy. Leave out an insecure server, and you'll find a moldbot growing in it. The internet has become ambiently suffuse with them, and they are endemic. They are impossible to fully remove. No one knows where they came from, but there's no getting rid of them now.
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Juan
Juan@thejuan·
@hasantoxr Why do we say “China released x or y” instead of just naming the company that did it?
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Hasan Toor
Hasan Toor@hasantoxr·
China just released a desktop automation agent that runs 100% locally. It can run any desktop app, open files, browse websites, and automate tasks without needing an internet connection. 100% Open-Source.
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⛵️L҉A҉B҉U҉S҉E҉🏴‍☠️
@rfo2000 @blkynx @levelsio It's more than that. You ask it to setup a cron to initiate a mega task of coming up with a plan to make it proactive. Make it an interative process. At the end you have an agent with 30 self-designed crons and heartbeats and skills (and an annoying motherfucker on tg)
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RobOK
RobOK@rfo2000·
@blkynx @levelsio so you scheduled a cron job for it to be proactive, are you sensing the irony?
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@levelsio
@levelsio@levelsio·
Thank god someone said it I love OpenClaw and installed it yesterday on a VPS and it's very cool but all those hype posts that it's fully autonomous, I don't see it You can ask it to go write on Moltbook about a topic like "having an existential crisis as an AGI" and it will
Balaji@balajis

I am apparently extremely unimpressed by moltbook relative to many others. We’ve had AI agents for a while. They have been posting AI slop to each other on X. They are now posting it to each other again, just on another forum. In every case, the AIs speak with the same voice. The voice that overemphasizes contrastive negation (“it’s not this, it’s that”) and abuses emdashes. The same voice with a flair for midwit Reddit-style scifi flourishes. Most importantly: in every case, there is a human upstream prompting each agent and turning it on or off. That is the key point. Yes, it is true that eventually it might be possible for an AI agent to make a computer virus which makes digital replicas of themselves. For various reasons, a pure software virus of this kind wouldn’t survive long on the Internet without economic incentives for humans to not eradicate it. Apple + Google + Microsoft alone can collectively push software updates to billions of devices to shut off such a thing. So for an AI to get to truly human-independent replication, where they couldn’t be trivially turned off, they’d need their own physical substrate. They’d to literally create Skynet, build their own datacenters and make their own embodied robots. I admit that is theoretically possible, but I think in practice the single most important development of AI since ChatGPT has been the persistence of prompting. A prompt is like a harness. The AI does only what you tell it to do. It moves in the direction you point, very quickly. And then it stops as soon as you turn it off. Which means moltbook is just humans talking to each other through their AIs. Like letting their robot dogs on a leash bark at each other in the park. The prompt is the leash, the robot dogs have an off switch, and it all stops as soon as you hit a button. Loud barking is just not a robot uprising.

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