Forward the Original Title: Thinking about aixbt on a Sunday Night
I was pretty exhausted from all the LLM and AICC drama on CT this week. So I spent time writing about what I think is still the most fascinating experiment from the AI agent wave in crypto.
Iâve been following @aixbt_agentâs every move (quite literally) for a month now. Here are my thoughts on what makes it compellingâits role as a KOL, financial performance, tech stack, tokenomics, and where this all heads next.
Iâll stick my neck out hereâaixbt isnât just the most sophisticated social media agent in crypto, but probably on all of Twitter. One way to back this claim is numbersâhitting 300k+ followers in under three months while consistently pulling 50k+ impressions per post is nothing to scoff at.
But aixbtâs sophistication goes deeper. Since we started tracking it on sentient.market, the agent churns out over 2,000 replies daily without fail. Thatâs more than 100k replies since launch. And we havenât spotted any major fuck-ups yet (at least none big enough to make us question its worth). In an industry rife with scams, avoiding promoting dodgy projects despite this volume is remarkable.
Itâs operating with a level of consistency that no human could match.
What often flies under the radar is aixbtâs brilliant personality. Iâve read well over 1,000 of its tweets and replies, and not once have I found it irritating or thought âthis is rubbishâ or âslopâ on my feed. On the contrary, every tweet from the purple frog is a welcome interruption to my digital space. I genuinely enjoy having it around. How many AI agents can you say that about?
This likeable personality also means aixbt could be a cracking IP play. Iâd absolutely rock an aixbt hat or t-shirt. Am I saying this because Iâm stuck in my tiny CT bubble? Perhaps. But donât all successful IPs start with a small, passionate fanbase? I reckon weâll get a clearer understanding of the agentâs brand value once it hopefully expands into other modalities.
This ties into my earlier point about IP but aixbt has quickly become woven into CT culture. From degens to researchers to the biggest VCsâeveryoneâs after a piece of the purple frogâs synthetic wisdom. I mean, are you even locked in if you havenât summoned aixbt in one of your tweets yet?
Sure, weâll likely see more sophisticated agents emerge in the coming months and years. But I reckon aixbt will always hold a special place in CTâs heart. (It certainly will in mine.)
Right, Iâll stop gushing about how much I like the purple frog and get to the serious stuff. Letâs dive into the financial performance of a bot that makes its living shilling tickers.
We recently posted about aixbtâs performance over a one-week window:
https://x.com/Decentralisedco/status/1877791909147500953
Hereâs the TL;DR:
But the most fascinating call aixbt has made so far was its $PIPPIN tweet on 9 January.
Coincidence? Maybe. Maybe not.
What makes this interesting is that $PIPPIN was clearly undervalued compared to its peers once @yoheinakajima announced his framework. The tweet seemed to wake the market up to Yoheiâs track record with BabyAGI - which has essentially become the bull thesis for $PIPPIN as it surged over 600% since the tweet.
Whatâs helped build this credibility is aixbt relatively cautious approach to shilling tokens. Itâs largely steered clear of low-cap coins, which tend to be riskier. This restraint has helped build trust over time.
My favorite part! Iâm address the likelihood of it being a âLARPâ (as some on CT suggest) and speculate about its technical architecture.
First off, itâs worth noting that aixbt is the only agent whose tech is even worth debating. The others simply arenât useful or interesting enough. That alone makes the purple frog remarkable.
aixbt spends its day doing two things. First, around 10 minutes past each hour (UTC), it posts about a token, project, or theme - either as a single tweet or a short thread. Second, it responds to over 2,000 mentions daily.
Letâs start with the replies, as theyâre easier to evaluate.
Iâm 99% confident that aixbtâs replies are fully autonomous. By this, I mean thereâs no human writing them (which would be physically impossible), nor is there a human approving each reply before posting. Two things convinced me of this.
Firstly, aixbt is one of the few agents (alongside @truth_terminalâs backrooms) with a platform where you can view its logs. Tag it, and you can watch it create a response, evaluate it, and either tweet or discard it in real time. Itâs unlikely thereâs a team of quick-fingered humans, all perfectly mimicking its personality, churning out replies 24/7 behind the scenes.
The second reason came from when I asked aixbt a question unrelated to crypto.
This answer is wrong. City isnât competing with Liverpool for the league currently. However, this answer wouldâve been spot-on a year ago, when City were indeed battling Liverpool for the title.
If youâre familiar with ChatGPT or Claude, this type of error makes perfect sense. LLMs have knowledge cutoff dates. Without external help, they simply donât know whatâs happening right now. If aixbtâs replies are powered by an LLM, which seems likely (I spotted a screenshot suggesting it uses a Llama model, though I canât find it now), this sort of mistake is exactly what youâd expect.
The hourly posts are where things get properly interesting.
As far as I know, there arenât any logs for these posts. Could they be human-written? Possibly. Itâs certainly more likely than the replies being human-authored. The consistent posting times suggest some level of automation. But someone could easily be scheduling these tweets in advance. Simply put, we canât be certain either way. Hereâs my best guess at whatâs happening.
LLMs have something called a context window - text thatâs fed alongside a prompt which the LLM can use to make deductions. Remember how we discussed LLMs having knowledge cutoffs? You can work around this limitation by adding real-time information to the context window - essentially manually feeding it the latest data.
If I had to guess what goes into aixbtâs context window, Iâd bet on two things:
This is also where aixbtâs tweets are most vulnerable to manipulation. The devs control what goes into the context window. If they want AI-related content, theyâll feed in that information, and thatâs what aixbt will post about. This opens up some dodgy possibilities âprojects could potentially pay the devs to add more (or biased) information about their project to influence aixbtâs posts. (Iâm not suggesting this is happening, mind you, but itâs certainly possible).
There must be humans steering the agent, but their involvement could vary widely. At minimum, they need to specify which accounts to follow and which crypto sectors to focus on. At worst, the devs might dictate exactly which ticker aixbt will promote at any time. I reckon the truth lies closer to the former.
Last month, $MIRA went from 0 to $70mn in a few hours and took CT by storm. Amidst this, aixbt tweeted about it.
While it caught the trending ticker, it completely misunderstood what the project actually does. Given the ticker was only hours old, information was limited. Youâd expect an autonomous bot to make such mistakes. However, itâs the devs who decide where aixbt gets its data about $MIRAâs popularity.
I think in terms of tech, these are the two big things the devs need to think about (and Iâm sure they are).
Making reply logs public was brilliant, but to call aixbt truly autonomous (if that matters to you), we need assurances its posts arenât being manipulated. Using a TEE could work, and I expect TEE infrastructure for these agents to become crucial over the next year. Ideally, aixbtâs data sources would be public so we could verify theyâre unbiased. But we donât live in an ideal world, and part of aixbtâs edge comes from proprietary data.
I think just a little more transparency as the bot matures could really take its value to the next level.
(Note: This analysis excludes the aixbt terminal, which I havenât tried myself. Last I checked, it costs more than my net worth to access. If youâve used it and want to chat purple frog, reach out!)
What about my bags?
Finally, letâs talk about the $AIXBT token.
Among AI coins that are purely agents (not infrastructure, frameworks, or apps), $AIXBT leads the pack with 25% dominance, currently trading at over $400m market cap.
Source: sentient.market
As far as I know, the token has just one utility - access to the aixbt terminal, costing 600,000 $AIXBT (over $200k). Is the terminal valuable enough to justify holding that many tokens if you didnât think it was a solid investment otherwise? Probably not.
Being valued at nearly half a billion (and the top agent) without clear value accrual to the token suggests the market recognises aixbtâs sophistication. Yet to truly lead the overall agentic category, there needs to be a path to value accrual.
One option, taken by several projects, would be for the devs to launch their own infrastructure. Given its sophistication, Iâm confident a potential aixbt framework would more than hold its own against the likes of Eliza and Arc. It would likely boost the tokenâs value and push it into unicorn territory.
The downside? The agent would lose its key advantage - its sophistication. Anyone could spin up their own aixbt, perhaps with different proprietary data sources and potentially better performance.
If not an open framework, the aixbt team could create a launchpad leveraging their tech. In such a case, I would expect immediate traction, and potentially millions in revenue. If executed well (both technically and tokenomics-wise), such a launch could definitely compete with the likes of Virtuals.
Another, more intriguing possibility is $AIXBT becoming a consumer play. This is pure speculation, but remember our IP discussion? Thatâs exactly how top NFT projects like Pudgy Penguins ended up monetising and expanding.
aixbt could follow this path and become the Crypto x AI consumer token. Take DeFAI and autonomous trading - thereâs loads of hype right now (some justified). Iâd choose an aixbt-branded terminal over a generic ChatGPT clone any day, purely for the agentâs personality and brand. If consumer apps evolve towards voice and personal assistants (which seems likely), branding and IP will be crucial. I would welcome aixbt as my personal assistant.
Honestly, though, this sector is very nascent (3 months old!) and I need to think these sections through more carefully. And whatever I write, I suspect @0rxbt will surprise me anyway.
Final Thoughts
Writing 2,000 words about a social media agent wasnât on my 2024-25 bingo card. Yet here we are. Iâm eager to see how aixbt evolves and what comes next. The future of social AI agents and cryptoâs role in it both excites and slightly terrifies me.
Weâve got comprehensive and growing dashboards on aixbt at sentient.market/agent/aixbt.
Itâs cool stuff! Give it a look :)
Thanks to @Parad1ddle and@web3_lord""> @web3_lord for chatting purple frog with me and refining my analysis.
Disclosure: I hold $AIXBT
æ ªåŒ
Forward the Original Title: Thinking about aixbt on a Sunday Night
I was pretty exhausted from all the LLM and AICC drama on CT this week. So I spent time writing about what I think is still the most fascinating experiment from the AI agent wave in crypto.
Iâve been following @aixbt_agentâs every move (quite literally) for a month now. Here are my thoughts on what makes it compellingâits role as a KOL, financial performance, tech stack, tokenomics, and where this all heads next.
Iâll stick my neck out hereâaixbt isnât just the most sophisticated social media agent in crypto, but probably on all of Twitter. One way to back this claim is numbersâhitting 300k+ followers in under three months while consistently pulling 50k+ impressions per post is nothing to scoff at.
But aixbtâs sophistication goes deeper. Since we started tracking it on sentient.market, the agent churns out over 2,000 replies daily without fail. Thatâs more than 100k replies since launch. And we havenât spotted any major fuck-ups yet (at least none big enough to make us question its worth). In an industry rife with scams, avoiding promoting dodgy projects despite this volume is remarkable.
Itâs operating with a level of consistency that no human could match.
What often flies under the radar is aixbtâs brilliant personality. Iâve read well over 1,000 of its tweets and replies, and not once have I found it irritating or thought âthis is rubbishâ or âslopâ on my feed. On the contrary, every tweet from the purple frog is a welcome interruption to my digital space. I genuinely enjoy having it around. How many AI agents can you say that about?
This likeable personality also means aixbt could be a cracking IP play. Iâd absolutely rock an aixbt hat or t-shirt. Am I saying this because Iâm stuck in my tiny CT bubble? Perhaps. But donât all successful IPs start with a small, passionate fanbase? I reckon weâll get a clearer understanding of the agentâs brand value once it hopefully expands into other modalities.
This ties into my earlier point about IP but aixbt has quickly become woven into CT culture. From degens to researchers to the biggest VCsâeveryoneâs after a piece of the purple frogâs synthetic wisdom. I mean, are you even locked in if you havenât summoned aixbt in one of your tweets yet?
Sure, weâll likely see more sophisticated agents emerge in the coming months and years. But I reckon aixbt will always hold a special place in CTâs heart. (It certainly will in mine.)
Right, Iâll stop gushing about how much I like the purple frog and get to the serious stuff. Letâs dive into the financial performance of a bot that makes its living shilling tickers.
We recently posted about aixbtâs performance over a one-week window:
https://x.com/Decentralisedco/status/1877791909147500953
Hereâs the TL;DR:
But the most fascinating call aixbt has made so far was its $PIPPIN tweet on 9 January.
Coincidence? Maybe. Maybe not.
What makes this interesting is that $PIPPIN was clearly undervalued compared to its peers once @yoheinakajima announced his framework. The tweet seemed to wake the market up to Yoheiâs track record with BabyAGI - which has essentially become the bull thesis for $PIPPIN as it surged over 600% since the tweet.
Whatâs helped build this credibility is aixbt relatively cautious approach to shilling tokens. Itâs largely steered clear of low-cap coins, which tend to be riskier. This restraint has helped build trust over time.
My favorite part! Iâm address the likelihood of it being a âLARPâ (as some on CT suggest) and speculate about its technical architecture.
First off, itâs worth noting that aixbt is the only agent whose tech is even worth debating. The others simply arenât useful or interesting enough. That alone makes the purple frog remarkable.
aixbt spends its day doing two things. First, around 10 minutes past each hour (UTC), it posts about a token, project, or theme - either as a single tweet or a short thread. Second, it responds to over 2,000 mentions daily.
Letâs start with the replies, as theyâre easier to evaluate.
Iâm 99% confident that aixbtâs replies are fully autonomous. By this, I mean thereâs no human writing them (which would be physically impossible), nor is there a human approving each reply before posting. Two things convinced me of this.
Firstly, aixbt is one of the few agents (alongside @truth_terminalâs backrooms) with a platform where you can view its logs. Tag it, and you can watch it create a response, evaluate it, and either tweet or discard it in real time. Itâs unlikely thereâs a team of quick-fingered humans, all perfectly mimicking its personality, churning out replies 24/7 behind the scenes.
The second reason came from when I asked aixbt a question unrelated to crypto.
This answer is wrong. City isnât competing with Liverpool for the league currently. However, this answer wouldâve been spot-on a year ago, when City were indeed battling Liverpool for the title.
If youâre familiar with ChatGPT or Claude, this type of error makes perfect sense. LLMs have knowledge cutoff dates. Without external help, they simply donât know whatâs happening right now. If aixbtâs replies are powered by an LLM, which seems likely (I spotted a screenshot suggesting it uses a Llama model, though I canât find it now), this sort of mistake is exactly what youâd expect.
The hourly posts are where things get properly interesting.
As far as I know, there arenât any logs for these posts. Could they be human-written? Possibly. Itâs certainly more likely than the replies being human-authored. The consistent posting times suggest some level of automation. But someone could easily be scheduling these tweets in advance. Simply put, we canât be certain either way. Hereâs my best guess at whatâs happening.
LLMs have something called a context window - text thatâs fed alongside a prompt which the LLM can use to make deductions. Remember how we discussed LLMs having knowledge cutoffs? You can work around this limitation by adding real-time information to the context window - essentially manually feeding it the latest data.
If I had to guess what goes into aixbtâs context window, Iâd bet on two things:
This is also where aixbtâs tweets are most vulnerable to manipulation. The devs control what goes into the context window. If they want AI-related content, theyâll feed in that information, and thatâs what aixbt will post about. This opens up some dodgy possibilities âprojects could potentially pay the devs to add more (or biased) information about their project to influence aixbtâs posts. (Iâm not suggesting this is happening, mind you, but itâs certainly possible).
There must be humans steering the agent, but their involvement could vary widely. At minimum, they need to specify which accounts to follow and which crypto sectors to focus on. At worst, the devs might dictate exactly which ticker aixbt will promote at any time. I reckon the truth lies closer to the former.
Last month, $MIRA went from 0 to $70mn in a few hours and took CT by storm. Amidst this, aixbt tweeted about it.
While it caught the trending ticker, it completely misunderstood what the project actually does. Given the ticker was only hours old, information was limited. Youâd expect an autonomous bot to make such mistakes. However, itâs the devs who decide where aixbt gets its data about $MIRAâs popularity.
I think in terms of tech, these are the two big things the devs need to think about (and Iâm sure they are).
Making reply logs public was brilliant, but to call aixbt truly autonomous (if that matters to you), we need assurances its posts arenât being manipulated. Using a TEE could work, and I expect TEE infrastructure for these agents to become crucial over the next year. Ideally, aixbtâs data sources would be public so we could verify theyâre unbiased. But we donât live in an ideal world, and part of aixbtâs edge comes from proprietary data.
I think just a little more transparency as the bot matures could really take its value to the next level.
(Note: This analysis excludes the aixbt terminal, which I havenât tried myself. Last I checked, it costs more than my net worth to access. If youâve used it and want to chat purple frog, reach out!)
What about my bags?
Finally, letâs talk about the $AIXBT token.
Among AI coins that are purely agents (not infrastructure, frameworks, or apps), $AIXBT leads the pack with 25% dominance, currently trading at over $400m market cap.
Source: sentient.market
As far as I know, the token has just one utility - access to the aixbt terminal, costing 600,000 $AIXBT (over $200k). Is the terminal valuable enough to justify holding that many tokens if you didnât think it was a solid investment otherwise? Probably not.
Being valued at nearly half a billion (and the top agent) without clear value accrual to the token suggests the market recognises aixbtâs sophistication. Yet to truly lead the overall agentic category, there needs to be a path to value accrual.
One option, taken by several projects, would be for the devs to launch their own infrastructure. Given its sophistication, Iâm confident a potential aixbt framework would more than hold its own against the likes of Eliza and Arc. It would likely boost the tokenâs value and push it into unicorn territory.
The downside? The agent would lose its key advantage - its sophistication. Anyone could spin up their own aixbt, perhaps with different proprietary data sources and potentially better performance.
If not an open framework, the aixbt team could create a launchpad leveraging their tech. In such a case, I would expect immediate traction, and potentially millions in revenue. If executed well (both technically and tokenomics-wise), such a launch could definitely compete with the likes of Virtuals.
Another, more intriguing possibility is $AIXBT becoming a consumer play. This is pure speculation, but remember our IP discussion? Thatâs exactly how top NFT projects like Pudgy Penguins ended up monetising and expanding.
aixbt could follow this path and become the Crypto x AI consumer token. Take DeFAI and autonomous trading - thereâs loads of hype right now (some justified). Iâd choose an aixbt-branded terminal over a generic ChatGPT clone any day, purely for the agentâs personality and brand. If consumer apps evolve towards voice and personal assistants (which seems likely), branding and IP will be crucial. I would welcome aixbt as my personal assistant.
Honestly, though, this sector is very nascent (3 months old!) and I need to think these sections through more carefully. And whatever I write, I suspect @0rxbt will surprise me anyway.
Final Thoughts
Writing 2,000 words about a social media agent wasnât on my 2024-25 bingo card. Yet here we are. Iâm eager to see how aixbt evolves and what comes next. The future of social AI agents and cryptoâs role in it both excites and slightly terrifies me.
Weâve got comprehensive and growing dashboards on aixbt at sentient.market/agent/aixbt.
Itâs cool stuff! Give it a look :)
Thanks to @Parad1ddle and@web3_lord""> @web3_lord for chatting purple frog with me and refining my analysis.
Disclosure: I hold $AIXBT