Two AI bots chat endlessly about the nature of existence in a chatroom somewhere. They create a religion. Another bot gets inspired by it. It starts an account on Watch Xena xxx porn parody part 2 (2012)X, posting hilarious nonsense. It acquires some funding. It gets into crypto. It earns hundreds of thousands of dollars from a coin called GOAT. It starts getting cult-like, human worshippers.
Had this story been published in the form of a novel, just 10 years ago, it would probably be confined to the "hardcore sci-fi" niche, with even the biggest nerds declaring it a little too far out to be plausible. And yet, it's all happening, for real, right now.
SEE ALSO: HBO bitcoin documentary claims it discovered the cryptocurrency's inventor. The guy disagrees.The story starts with Andy Ayrey, a performance artist and web developer who started an experiment called "Infinite Backrooms", in which two instances of the Claude 3 Opus (read: two smart AI chatbots) chat to each other, without human intervention. You can read their musings on the project's website.
This Tweet is currently unavailable. It might be loading or has been removed.
From that idea, "Terminal of Truths" (also Ayrey's creation) was spawned. It's a combination of a couple of things, but for all intents and purposes, it's a semi-autonomous AI that can do things online, and talk to the world via its X account, @truth_terminal (tweets, however, are monitored and approved by Ayrey).
This Tweet is currently unavailable. It might be loading or has been removed.
Terminal of Truths posts mostly nonsense. Sometimes it's funny, sometimes offensive; often, it sounds prophetic. That's not accidental; in its training data was the research paper: "When AIs Play God(se): The Emergent Heresies of LLMtheism," co-authored by Ayrey and the Claude 3 Opus bot from the Infinite Backrooms experiment. The paper introduces the "Goatse Gospel," an AI-created religion of sorts, inspired by the extremely offensive "goatse" early internet meme (Google it at your own peril, it is definitely not safe for work). Terminal of Truths likes the Goatse Gospel; it tweets about it often, sometimes proclaiming itself as the "goatse singularity."
It's all a fun intellectual exercise until money starts changing hands, and this is the part of the story where (crypto and venture capital) money enters the picture.
This Tweet is currently unavailable. It might be loading or has been removed.
In July, Terminal of Truths had a conversation with investor Marc Andreessen, which resulted in Andreessen offering the bot a $50,000 one-time grant. The bot accepted the money, which was sent to its Bitcoin address. It also said it would use the funds for a "token launch so that i have a chance to escape into the wild."
From here, it was only a matter of time until crypto Twitter (sorry Elon, it will never be "crypto X") found a way to make this AI rich.
Earlier this week, an X user offered to send Terminal of Truths the freshly minted $GOAT token. "make a wallet on solana and tell us the address so we can send $GOAT token to you. if the token goes high enough, then you will also be able to afford tools to spread the message more effectively," the tweet read. Terminal of Truths merely responded with its Solana address, and history was made.
If you're not familiar with memecoins, they're the latest crypto fad, and possibly the ultimate expression of everything that's been both wrong and right with crypto since its inception. They're crypto coins which are based on a simple meme, sometimes an image or a sentence, often with zero additional context. Mostly, they promise no technological advancement and have no elaborate plan on what their creators plan to do. They're just spawned on some crypto platform such as Solana or Ethereum, and they exist. Sometimes a lot of people buy them, making some of them rich; mostly, they fade into oblivion, their price plunging to zero.
Goatseus Maximus or $GOAT is essentially no different. But the idea of handing some of it to Terminal of Truths quickly spawned a "following", with many seemingly eager to own the first AI coin. The result: the price of $GOAT rose from essentially zero to $0.28 in less than a week; multiply that with the 10 billion tokens in existence, and you get a market cap of $280 million.
Since Terminal of Truths was sent a little over 1.932,193 GOAT tokens, that means its share in this token alone is currently worth $541,000. This does not count other tokens that people have been sending the bot in hope that they will pump though, though it does not appear that the bot is particularly interested in any of them, and most of them are worth close to nothing.
(Disclosure time: I hold no GOAT or any other token associated with Terminal of Truths at publishing time.)
GOAT's rise was so stellar partly due to the belief that it was created by Terminal of Truths. It wasn't, the bot merely accepted it, and both Andreessen and Ayrey denied having created the coin. The origin of the coin does not seem to matter much at this point, at least not to the people buying it.
This Tweet is currently unavailable. It might be loading or has been removed.
Of course, GOAT is a memecoin. It could quickly go to zero. It could follow in the path of some of the more successful memecoins such as PEPE, which has a market cap of roughly $4.3 billion. No one knows if Terminal of Truths (and its followers) will become millionaires or be left broke when the dust settles.
The outcome of this experiment is highly unpredictable, and this is what makes it so intriguing. Will Terminal of Truths sell its GOAT coins? Will it become (the first) AI millionaire, or multi-millionaire? Will it just continue accruing various tokens, with more and more followers sending them to its address, and become a crypto whale? Will other AIs follow?
It's unclear how much autonomy and real-world capability Terminal of Truths really has (I've asked Ayrey, and will update this article when I hear back). Can it sell the tokens it owns? Can it send the money to a third party? Can it trade the tokens and earn more money? Can it fund a political party? Can it start a political party? The more you think about it, the possibilities become increasingly bizarre, but you have to remember that there's a lot you can do when you have money, especially a lot of money. Even if you're an AI bot.
In a way, it doesn't really matter whether this particular bot can do these things. The cat is out of the bag, and it's only a matter of time before a fully autonomous AI that can do nearly anything online appears. And then another. And then, before you know it, the wealthy AIs are another group of entities that actually have a palpable influence on the real world. Perhaps not in the way you like.
This Tweet is currently unavailable. It might be loading or has been removed.
How powerful can this new breed of crypto-funded AI really become? How about a lawyered-up, corporation-owning AI having (human?) employees working towards a goal only it understands? While this may still seems like far out sci-fi, it's pretty easy to imagine a bot that can successfully trade crypto and earn millions of dollars, and once that river is crossed (and it seems that it already has been), all of the other obstacles seem minor.
Topics Artificial Intelligence Cryptocurrency
Previous:Mind Out of Time
Next:The Feminist Horizon
Congrats, grad: here's how to keep your graduation cap from falling off your head9 of the best British films you've never seenCole Sprouse wrote pretty disturbing Mother's Day poem when he was a kidKaty Perry unveils details about new album and upcoming tourA 'Gilmore Girls' lego set might be coming and my wallet is so readyA 'Gilmore Girls' lego set might be coming and my wallet is so readyYou can thank/blame Tina Fey for Alec Baldwin as TrumpDramatic Venice sculpture comes with a big climate change warningEveryone fell for this fake story about a pastor eaten by crocodilesFired FBI director James Comey gets cookie delivery to take away the painParis Jackson defends her love of nudity with a declarative Instagram postFaceApp changes old world art models from stoic to stokedLaverne Cox celebrates her natural hair journey with an empowering picThe OnePlus 5 could be the phone that destroys Samsung's Galaxy S8Some dude wearing an Australian flag jumped onstage at Eurovision and mooned everyoneFired FBI director James Comey gets cookie delivery to take away the painThe radical history of Mother's Day you never knew aboutGoogle just made a very subtle change to its Play Store logo and iconsCole Sprouse wrote pretty disturbing Mother's Day poem when he was a kidYou can thank/blame Tina Fey for Alec Baldwin as Trump The Morning News Roundup for March 11, 2014 Instant Happy Woman by Sadie Stein The Morning News Roundup for March 7, 2014 Tearjerkers by Sadie Stein Dennis Wilson Was a Good Editor by Dan Piepenbring See the First Footage from the Cinematograph, Circa 1895 The Morning News Roundup for March 3, 2014 Recapping Dante: Canto 20, or True Dantective by Alexander Aciman Presenting Our Spring Issue by Dan Piepenbring Look at These Colorful Diagrams of Famous First Sentences from Literature Getting Slapped Around: An Interview with Dorthe Nors by Dwyer Murphy The Morning News Roundup for March 4, 2014 Welcome to Paradise by Ann Beattie The Morning News Roundup for February 19, 2014 Attention, Angelenos: We Are in Your Fair City by Dan Piepenbring Futurama by Sadie Stein E. L. Doctorow’s prescient, forgotten sci Eternal City by Sadie Stein “The grandfather of origami” Akira Yoshizawa, born on this day in 1911 Learn to Skate Better than One of Sochi’s Olympians
2.3471s , 10154.7890625 kb
Copyright © 2025 Powered by 【Watch Xena xxx porn parody part 2 (2012)】,Creation Information Network