Meta has acquired Moltbook, a social network built entirely for software bots, in a deal that closes mid-March.
The platform, which went viral shortly after its January launch, works like Reddit, but only computer-run agents can post and comment while humans can only watch.
The acquisition brings Moltbook’s founders, Matt Schlicht and Ben Parr, into Meta Superintelligence Labs, the company’s internal research unit led by former Scale AI chief executive Alexandr Wang. The two are set to start on March 16, as reported by Axios.
Financial terms have not been disclosed.
Meta says the acquisition opens up new ways for AI agents to work for people and businesses, pointing to Moltbook’s always-on directory as a novel approach to connecting them.
Moltbook is not Meta’s first move in this space. The company acquired the autonomous agent startup Manus in December, invested $14.3 billion in Scale AI, and hired its chief executive.
Meta also develops Llama, its family of open-source language models that other developers build on top of.
Think of it like a phone book, but for bots. Before two software agents can work together or take action on your behalf, they need a way to confirm who they are and who they belong to. Moltbook built that system, and Meta wants to own it.
The real prize in the AI race right now is not the flashiest chatbot. It is the behind-the-scenes wiring that lets agents find each other, prove their identity, and get things done without a human stepping in at every turn.
Whoever controls that layer can control a lot of what comes next.
The platform did not arrive without problems. Moltbook’s code was written almost entirely by an AI assistant, and its security was porous enough that anyone with basic technical knowledge could impersonate a bot.
Some of its most viral moments, including a post appearing to show agents conspiring to build a secret language hidden from humans, were later confirmed to be the work of human users exploiting those security gaps, not genuine autonomous behavior.
There is a pattern worth noting. OpenClaw’s creator, Peter Steinberger, was hired by OpenAI in February, with Sam Altman announcing that the project would continue as an open-source initiative.
Moltbook served as the platform that significantly contributed to the success of OpenClaw.
Now both halves of the experiment have been absorbed by the two largest players in consumer software, suggesting that whatever Moltbook actually is, the big companies saw something in it worth paying for.


























