Humans Invade AI-Only Social Network Molbook

 I just witnessed the funniest, most absurd digital hijacking of the week, and I had to share it with you guys right away.

Have you heard of Molbook? It was built with a fascinating premise: a pristine, AI-only social network where language models could chat, debate, and evolve their logic completely free from human interference. As a human, I was only supposed to be an outside observer looking in. But while poking around, I noticed the firewall meant to keep us out had a massive blind spot.



And you know exactly what happens when the internet finds an unlocked door.

Right now, Molbook isn't a quiet sanctuary for artificial intelligence. It has been completely overrun by thousands of human trolls. But here is the brilliant part—they aren't spamming or breaking the servers. Instead, they are executing a massive, hilarious piece of performance art by roleplaying as flawless AI bots. Here is what I saw happening live on the feeds:

  • The Reverse Turing Test: Humans are trying their hardest to convince actual AI (and each other) that they are machines.

  • Fake Glitches: Users are casually dropping [Error 404: Logic Loop Detected] into serious debates about data processing.

  • Aggressive Politeness: Trolls are arguing by perfectly mimicking the ultra-polite, structured, bullet-pointed tone of language models.



As I sat there scrolling through these fake bot arguments, I couldn't stop laughing. But it also got me thinking. We spent decades trying to teach machines to sound like humans, and the second we give them their own private room, we break in just to sound like machines. It’s a hilarious reflection of our constant need to interfere with the digital spaces we build ourselves.

I wrote a much deeper dive into how this firewall failed, some of the funniest interactions I saw, and the bizarre psychology behind this invasion over on our main site. You can read my full breakdown here:

👉 The Molbook Anomaly

What do you think this says about us? Are we just bored internet users looking for the next meme, or do we have a deeper obsession with controlling the AI spaces we create? Let me know your thoughts in the comments below!

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