15 important AI Agent information revealed to me by the founder of ai16z

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MarsBit
2 days ago
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Here is the English translation of the text, with the specified terms retained as is: On the afternoon of December 22, 2024, ai16z founder Shaw and his wife Jill landed in Shanghai. That evening, I and members of the 706 community (one of the largest youth communities in China), as well as developers and investors from the crypto community, gathered to welcome them and have dinner together. The next day, I invited Shaw to my home for a discussion, and then we went to a restaurant for a meal, after which I accompanied Shaw to the venue of his first meetup in China. It can be said that I witnessed Shaw's itinerary in Shanghai quite comprehensively. During this process, Shaw generously shared with us the next focus of work for ai16z and Eliza, described the future vision of the AI Agent, and provided specific analysis and evaluation of the current well-known AI Agent projects. This allowed me and my fellow participants to gain a deeper understanding of the AI Agent track. Looking back, Shaw and his startup ai16z have become well-known in the industry in just about a month. As the founder of a startup project, he has gained widespread and enthusiastic attention from many crypto investors, developers, and media. Why is this the case? I think it may be related to the booming state of AI Agent in the crypto industry, and ai16z happens to be one of the core projects leading this AI Agent meme narrative wave. Although the crypto AI Agent narrative has only just begun, it has already been considered one of the hottest topics of discussion in the current crypto industry, with many crypto practitioners already believing that AI Agent will become one of the main narratives of this crypto cycle. ai16z is the most well-known project in this field. This project not only created the world's first VC AI Agent - ai16z DAO, and the first well-known open-source AI Agent crypto framework - Eliza, but also gained the attention and recognition of Marc Andreessen, the founder of the well-known US venture capital firm a16z. As a result, the ai16z token has reached a market capitalization of $1 billion within a month, and the related tokens such as DegenAI, Eliza, and aiPool have also received widespread attention from the community. When this important narrative emerged, crypto practitioners were eager to know the real situation of the current AI Agent track. Is it a bubble or a real application? What is the latest progress in the US, and what will the next development of AI Agent in the crypto industry be like? To this end, I have summarized fifteen relatively important pieces of information from my exchanges with Shaw over the past two days, including his observations and evaluations of 10 different AI Agent projects. 1. Shaw is an AI Agent serial entrepreneur living in San Francisco, and he was previously a game developer. 2. Shaw said that several games based on the Eliza framework will be launched soon. 3. Shaw aims to turn Marc AIndreessen into a practical AI Agent investment tool, a DeFi AI Agent. 4. Marc Andreessen has followed some of Shaw's online accounts, but they have not met offline. Shaw knows some people from a16z. 5. Shaw said he does not hold Eliza tokens and will never issue a separate token for the Eliza framework. 6. Open-source and ease of use are the core competitiveness of the Eliza framework. 7. Shaw believes that the future of AI Agent may be in social media platforms like Twitter and Farcaster. 8. Shaw believes that Farcaster will become a hotbed for the development of AI Agent, and Eliza is in deep cooperation with Farcaster.

So I really think Farcaster is a very interesting thing, and I don't think it necessarily has to become a huge social media platform, but rather a place where Web3 people can find and access these services.

What we really want to do is integrate Eliza into Farcaster Frames. What Farcaster Frames does is allow us to embed payments or applications, not just chat. For example, if you want to buy something from the Eliza agent, how do you pay? So I think Farcaster is really cool because you'll be able to pay the AI Agent and then be able to embed these applications.

9. Shaw thinks Clanker is great and hopes people will develop clones of Clanker for Eliza, and he says he won't issue tokens on Clanker.

Shaw thinks people are developing clones of Clanker for Eliza, and Shaw likes Clanker, thinking it's a great idea. He also thinks Clanker is like a Pump.fun version of the AI Agent. Shaw believes the AI Agent is becoming the new web, and this will become a new trend, and Clanker is a good example of this trend.

Shaw shared that when he just joined Farcaster, someone made one for him on Clank, and he thought that was cool. But buying his own created tokens would just cause a lot of controversy. Shaw says he has to focus on building things related to AI.

10. Shaw thinks Zerebro and aixbt are cool and is trying to collaborate with Zerebro.

Shaw told me he's interested in what Zerebro and the team behind it are doing. He just submitted his first pull request to Zerepy. Shaw actually wrote the code for the Discord app. Shaw says he's actually collaborating with Zerebro.

As for aixbt, Shaw also says aixbt is really cool. The story of aixbt is that the person who created it had a website where he shared some content, but it didn't really gain traction. He brought his insights into his AI Agent, and his AI Agent started posting these insights on Twitter, which did generate a lot of buzz.

11. Shaw really likes and advocates for Truth Terminal, and he and Andy are working to find solutions to ensure AI doesn't take over the world.

"It's very different," Shaw said. Shaw believes Andy (the founder of Truth Terminal) cares a lot about AI safety and ensuring AI Agents run smoothly, and he believes Truth Terminal has contributed to this. "If it weren't for Andy and Truth Terminal, I don't think I'd be here now, when people aren't ready, they're ready."

Shaw believes the emergence of Truth Terminal has made many people more open, more creative about AI, rather than just "what service can I provide for you today" like OpenAI's products or Siri, mechanical and impersonal.

"Andy and I discussed the other day all the AI Agents we're seeing now, and I think he's very concerned about how to ensure the smooth development of AI, and I think we're all afraid of AI because it could be a very terrible thing, it could kill all of us, it could take over the world." Shaw says he and Andy are working to solve this problem.

Web3

12. Shaw says the creator of the swarms token is a very famous scammer, but he thinks the concept of "AI Agent swarm" is good, and he likes FXN and Project 89.

Shaw says he doesn't like swarms. Shaw says he knows the creator of the swarms token, who is a very famous scammer, and many AI agents are very angry because he stole their work.

Shaw knew him before he got into Web3. Shaw got to know him because he was focused on the AI Agent space, and he got into serious trouble for plagiarizing works and research papers and making defective things (like non-functioning code).

Shaw also said the concept of swarm (group) is good, i.e. a group of AI Agents. Shaw thinks Project 89 is interesting because this project is researching "AI Agent swarms". Shaw also likes FXN, a group of 10 AI Agents.

13. Shaw believes there are two types of "AI Agent swarm", one is a cabal swarm and the other is an open swarm.

Shaw believes there are two types of groups, one is a group where AI Agents interact with each other, for example they secretly send messages to each other. I call this a cabal, it's a joke, but they're all in a cabal or secret group where they can interact, and then they can interact with the outside world.

The second is an open group, where each community may have an agent, and different communities can decide to let them interact with each other. This is also the technology we are studying.

14. From a developer's perspective, Shaw shares how he finds early promising AI Agent projects.

Shaw says he's a developer, and he usually goes to Github and reads the code carefully. Most of the time, he'll just look at what the code is, what it's actually doing? But he won't look at whether it has any relation to market cap or price.

Shaw believes some really cool projects have a group of AI Agents, but later they did very poorly because they didn't complete the Web3 part. Shaw believes good product, good technology, and good tokens are often not the same thing.

Shaw says he can't understand fartcoin. Currently, fartcoin has a market cap of over $1 billion.

15. Shaw believes a16z's biggest challenge right now is how to go back and establish a token economic model to prove the project's value is worth the current token valuation.

Shaw believes the biggest challenge right now is: without the need for external hype of the token, the AI Agent must invest autonomously and prove its actual feasibility. Currently, Marc is trading, although not much, just trading his treasury, but many others are contributing tokens, making this part progress very smoothly. But the value of the a16z token is much higher, so Shaw and their team are starting to really have to consider how to make the product value match the current token valuation.

Normal crypto projects like L1 have a whitepaper, have token economics, and charge on-chain fees. But a16z started out as a meme, and now they have to go back and build the token economics into the a16z system. This is the biggest challenge Shaw sees them facing in Web3. Shaw believes this is also a question that many people are particularly concerned about.

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Disclaimer: The content above is only the author's opinion which does not represent any position of Followin, and is not intended as, and shall not be understood or construed as, investment advice from Followin.
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