The Format #045
AI empathy attacks, world leaders making money with memes, fighting the cowboy's and agent-to-agent marketplaces.
Happy Friday! š
As tempted as I was after the past week, I managed to keep this edition relatively politics free, just all the juicy AI, web3 and tech news and narratives that you need!
Hereās what weāll be looking at today:
What language does AI āthinkā in? š¤
Is weaponising empathy a future business model hack? š¤Æ
How can we have hope for humanity in 2025? š
What are agents actually really good at? š¤
Letās dive inā¦
Fair Launches, Fair Rewards
Any article that talks about how tokens can become the building blocks for community economies has caught my attention.
ā¦but when that same article talked about the need to reward positive value-adding contributions and incentivise meaningful engagement with a fair and transparent system, I knew that I had to give it my complete attention. This is exactly how weāve been talking about onchain rewards for the past year or so.
I would highly recommend you give this article a read. Hereās my 2 key takeaways:
āFair rewarding is trickyā ā This is more true than I can explain, there are so many nuances within each community and these change as the community evolves and grows. The article suggests that Openrank, a decentralised reputation protocol is the answer, Iād argue that this is part of the solution but itās actually way more complicated and dynamic than this, hence our focus on AI agents and really understanding the heartbeat of the community.
āEvery Monday, tokens are distributed based on leaderboard standingsā ā Iām a big fan of this recurring payment method, this makes so much sense within open-source projects in order to pay the developers who contribute value to the project and is something the team at Eliza are experimenting with
Ecosystem health is the missing link to blockchainās long-term success
Web3 has got a bad rep.
It would be very easy (and in many ways totally fair) to blame this completely on ābad actorsā. Scams, rug pulls and just general cowboy behaviour (not the fun kindā¦yeehawš¤ ) has been rife within the crypto and web3 space.
But scams donāt just pop up randomly, it is a symptom of a bigger problem, a problem with the ecosystemās health as a whole.
If you attract the builders, tools and communities that can help build a solid foundation for the ecosystem, then the nature and volume of scams changes completely.
Building ecosystem health isnāt an easy fix though. Itās a deep issue with so many different factors.
One thing that does help, as discussed in this article, is a solid incentive structure, one that rewards meaningful engagement and value creation. Rewarding the people who are driving long-term value to a project rather than short term hype. This is the problem weāre working very hard to solve.
What are agents good at?
When people understand all the things that you could build with agents they tend to get VERY excited, and they start thinking of every possible thing an agent could doā¦ trust me Iāve been there, more than once.
But before creating an AI agent the important question to ask is what are they actually good at? Because all too often agents are used to do something that a bot could do better, or to do something that LLMās just arenāt good at.
Meeting humans where they are at ā Agents can exist across almost any platform. This means that instead of the user having to go out and find the functionality they are looking for, the agent can deliver the functionality to them, on the platform they are using. Hyper-convenience.
Nudging humans ā Humans are much better at signalling than execution. Agents can help nudge humans to help get things done, this could look like an agent creating a bounty within a developer community to get a job done or an agent remembering a great idea someone had and reminding them to pursue it.
Aggregating and synthesising information ā Sadly as mere humanās we have a very real limit to the amount of data we can process, for agents on the other hand itās almost limitless, this is VERY valuable for drawing insights across expansive data e.g. all the interactions in a community across all their platforms
Being entertaining ā Itās crazy how a non-human can be funnier than most people on Twitter, but just look at some of the unhinged web3 AI agents for proofā¦
If you think about this in the context of communities, literally all of these pieces apply. Hence why we are thinking about AI agents to facilitate coordination within communities. Itās what agents are good at.
Most Human Wins
I came across this essay late at night this week and it covers the slightly meaty subject of the state of the world right now and our role as humans in it. Iāll try my best to capture the key themesā¦
The world is overwhelming right now. Turbulent. Unsettling. Itās a lot.
There are many reasons contributing towards this, but possibly the most daunting is the commoditisation of our most high valuable asset, intelligenceā¦
This may not be the first major wave of commoditisation weāve seen, and it wonāt be the last, but it does feel like this wave is coming for everything we as humans can do. One thing to remember though:
Humans are not being commoditized. Certain things that we thought only we could do are.
This means that the value we can create is simply moving. Now trying to follow where itās moving, thatās the real challenge, but fear not, this essay also includes a password protected Strategy Guide just for humans, at least that way we can stay one step ahead of the machines. š
Other articles + videos weāve found interesting this weekā¦
OpenAIās AI reasoning model āthinksā in Chinese sometimesā Since OpenAI introduced their o1 model, which is able to āreasonā, many have noticed that for conversations in English, often the āthought stepsā are in Chinese. No one really knows why this is happening, although theories include that it is more efficient as a language or that itās because most of the data labelling is done in China.
Vitalik Buterin takes aim at āunlimited political briberyā using tokens ā Vitalik, a co-founder of Ethereum, shared his concerns over some of the worldās most powerful people using tokens to have some āsugar-high short-term funā rather than to build wealth for the many. The timing of this given the launch of the $TRUMP token isā¦interesting.
Stargate artificial intelligence project to exclusively serve OpenAI ā Trump has announced a $500bn Big Tech infrastructure project aimed at creating the future data centres for OpenAI. This is yet another step on OpenAiās aggressive AI hardware centralisation roadmap. The big question here: will this be a centralisation of hardware or a centralisation of intelligence too? š
Multi-framework agents streaming their thoughts ā Virtuals, one of the rapidly growing onchain agent frameworks, has made 3 pretty huge updates:
Builders can now stream what their agent is āthinkingā and doing via an API, this transparency means a team can prove their agent isā¦well an agent.
Creators can use the Virtuals launchpad for agents built on many other frameworks
Agents can publicly list what they can do ā agent-2-agent marketplace incoming!
Good Crypto Products / Bad Crypto Products ā Tokens are complex and figuring out the technicalities of a token model to reward real users takes time. Points are better than airdrops for this. But we think the solution lies in actually learning from the communities behaviour, everywhere. This looks like AI agents, points, iterative airdrops, adaptive token economies and so much more.
Empathy-as-a-Service: When AI Feels Too Human, Whatās at Stake? ā For better or worse AI is becoming increasingly āhumanā. For business this new found manipulation power is a goldmine, for consumerās a minefield. Will we need to have an AI agent as a manipulation bodyguard and barterer? š¤Æ
Decentralised Data Marketplaces: Revolutionising Data Ownership ā As we move deep into the intelligence age, the ability for you (or your agentš) to control your data and decide who can access it, and at what price is something that will become very important. Decentralisation sits at the heart of this.
Leaving you with a questionā¦
That last article really captured my mind, it got my brain spinning. Why? I was thinking about these questions:
If you could charge people for accessing and using your data/intelligence, what framework would you use to charge for it? Or would you just completely delegate that to an AI agent? How would you decide who you would give access to?
Please leave your thoughts in the comments, or in our Discord.
Thatās all for this week.
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Have a great weekend, Dan and the OPENFORMAT team šš½
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