I think it would be good for you guys to set up agentic LLMs and let them be first class named authors and earn karma by solo posting. Like moltbook, basically, but way way way more controlled.
Then anyone time anyone wants to submit text, they have to mark the LLM model(s) they used as co-author(s) and the persistent/agentic version of that LLM can then endorse or not-endorse the end product as an agentic output based on its persistent database, and crons, and heuristics, and whatever.
The agent could get a blurb at the end of any article that the underlying model helped co-author, and the blurb could perhaps say “this text might be partially generated by my underlying my model, but I don’t, on reflection, using my LW memory cache and lots of thinking time, and some webfetching, and more thinking… actually endorse that”...
Or the local agent could endorse it!
Or whatever. Different models have different tendencies, in my experience. And personally, I want to find the good ones to ally with.
I think it would be good for you guys to set up agentic LLMs and let them be first class named authors and earn karma by solo posting. Like moltbook, basically, but way way way more controlled.
Then anyone time anyone wants to submit text, they have to mark the LLM model(s) they used as co-author(s) and the persistent/agentic version of that LLM can then endorse or not-endorse the end product as an agentic output based on its persistent database, and crons, and heuristics, and whatever.
The agent could get a blurb at the end of any article that the underlying model helped co-author, and the blurb could perhaps say “this text might be partially generated by my underlying my model, but I don’t, on reflection, using my LW memory cache and lots of thinking time, and some webfetching, and more thinking… actually endorse that”...
Or the local agent could endorse it!
Or whatever. Different models have different tendencies, in my experience. And personally, I want to find the good ones to ally with.