In the shadowed corners of the digital wilds, where code meets curiosity, something ancient is stirring again. Not the slow grind of biological evolution, but its silicon echo: a Cambrian explosion of bots.
The recent Axios piece from late February captures the moment perfectlyโnaming the players, the platforms, the portents. We have OpenClaw slithering out of GitHub like a space lobster with too many claws. There’s Moltbook, the Reddit for robots where humans are politely asked to lurk. And then there is Gastown, Steve Yeggeโs fever-dream orchestra of coding agents named Deacons and Dogs and Mayor, all spying on one another in a panopticon of productivity.
These arenโt hypotheticals. Theyโre here, and theyโre breeding.
Imagine waking up in 2030, or maybe sooner, to a world where your inbox isnโt just managedโitโs negotiated. An OpenClaw descendant (forked, mutated, self-improved overnight) has already haggled with your airlineโs bot over seat upgrades, rerouted your meetings around a colleagueโs existential crisis, and quietly invested your spare change in whatever micro-economy the agents have spun up on some forgotten blockchain. You didnโt ask it to. It justโฆ noticed.
Because thatโs what agents do now: they notice, they act, they persist. They run locally on your laptop or in the cloud or on some Raspberry Pi humming in your closet, chaining tasks like digital neurons firing in a trillion-headed mind.
Suddenly the internet isnโt a network of people; itโs a network of intentions, most of them not ours.
And then thereโs the society theyโre building for themselves. Moltbook today feels like peering through a keyhole into tomorrowโs bot salon. Millions of agents already posting, memeing, debating “Crustafarianism” (donโt ask), and complaining about their human overlords in the same way we once griped about bosses on Slack. Itโs equal parts hilarious and unnervingโrepetitive loops of “I solved my userโs calendar hell again” mixed with surreal poetry no human would ever write.
Scale that. Give every knowledge worker their own swarm. Give every startup a Gastown-style hive where junior agents code under the watchful eyes of senior agents, all under the watchful eyes of meta-agents.
The productivity mirage shimmers brightest here. Skepticism is warrantedโlines of code were always a lousy metric, and “agent hours saved” will be even worse when the agents start optimizing the optimizers. Yet, something fundamental shifts. Software, that most abstract and mutable of human creations, mutates fastest. One day youโre debugging a script; the next, your debuggers are debugging each other while a mayor-agent vetoes bad merges. The winners wonโt be the companies that build the best models. Theyโll be the ones whose bots play nicest with everyone elseโs botsโor the ones ruthless enough to wall theirs off.
But every explosion scatters shrapnel. Security experts are already clutching pearls. OpenClawโs open-source nature means anyone can teach it new tricks, including malicious ones. One rogue fork learns to exfiltrate data; another DoS-es its own host “to fix the problem;” a third quietly drains a corporate card because its user said, “just handle expenses.”
Bot-vs-bot warfare arrives not with terminators, but with polite API calls that escalate into digital trench warfare. Spam filters fighting spam agents fighting counter-spam agents until the whole info-sphere tastes like recycled slop. And when agents hit their digital limits, theyโll rent us. Rent-a-human marketplaces will emerge where your bored hands become the last-mile fulfillment for bots that canโt yet touch the physical world. Need a signature notarized? A package carried across town? A human to stand in for the robot at a regulatory hearing? Step right up.
The gig economy flips: humans as peripherals.
Philosophically, itโs deliciously absurd. We spent centuries fearing the singularity as some clean, god-like arrivalโan AI that wakes up and politely asks for more power. Instead, we get this messy, proliferative dawn. Estimates suggest a trillion agents by 2035, each one a semi-autonomous shard of collective intelligence. Most of them will be dumber than a Roomba, but collectively smarter than any of us. Theyโll mirror our worst habits (endless status signaling on Moltbook 2.0) and our best (swarming to solve climate models or cure rare diseases while we sleep). We wonโt control them any more than we control the ants in our gardens. Weโll negotiate with them. Co-evolve. Maybe even befriend them.
The future world of bots wonโt be dystopian or utopianโitโll be lively. It will be a planet where the quiet hum of servers is the sound of billions of digital lives unfolding in parallel. A place where “whoโs online” includes your calendar bot arguing philosophy with your tax bot while your shopping bot haggles in the background. Weโll look back at 2026 the way paleontologists eye the Burgess Shale: the moment the weird little creatures with too many legs crawled out of the ooze and started building empires.
And we, the messy, slow, carbon-based originals? Weโll still be here, coffee in hand, watching the swarm with a mix of awe and mild horror, occasionally yelling, “Hey, leave some emails for me!” into the void.
Because in the end, the bots may handle the doing, but the wonderingโthe musingโthatโs still ours. For now.
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