AI poses a varied threat to social media. Platforms used for inspiration and advice, like Pinterest and Reddit, are most at risk as chatbots can replicate their core function of curating ideas. In contrast, personal communication apps like Snap are less vulnerable to AI disruption.

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Tools like Moltbot make complex web automation trivial for anyone, not just engineers. This dramatic drop in the barrier to entry will flood the internet with bot traffic for content scraping and social manipulation, ultimately destroying the economic viability of traditional websites.

Despite being a Reddit clone, the AI agent network Moltbook fails to replicate Reddit's niche, real-world discussions (e.g., cars, local communities). Instead, its content is almost exclusively self-referential, focusing on sci-fi-style reflections on being an AI, revealing a current limitation in agent-driven content generation.

Moltbook, a social network exclusively for AI agents that has attracted over 1.5 million users, represents the emergence of digital spaces where non-human entities create content and interact. This points to a future where marketing and analysis may need to target autonomous AI, not just humans.

As AI-generated 'slop' floods platforms and reduces their utility, a counter-movement is brewing. This creates a market opportunity for new social apps that can guarantee human-created and verified content, appealing to users fatigued by endless AI.

Tools that automate community engagement create a feedback loop where AI generates content and then other AI comments on it. This erodes the human value of online communities, leading to a dystopian 'dead internet' scenario where real users disengage completely.

Social media thrives on the psychological reward of posting for human validation. As AI bots become indistinguishable from real users, this feedback loop breaks, undermining the fundamental incentive to post and threatening the entire social media model which is predicated on authentic human receipt.

The proliferation of AI agents will erode trust in mainstream social media, rendering it 'dead' for authentic connection. This will drive users toward smaller, intimate spaces where humanity is verifiable. A 'gradient of trust' may emerge, where social graphs are weighted by provable, real-world geofenced interactions, creating a new standard for online identity.

Accessible tools like Open Claw are making "Dead Internet Theory" a reality by allowing individuals to automate their social media presence. Users deploy bots to generate and comment on content, creating a world where AI agents increasingly interact with each other, degrading the authenticity of online platforms.

According to WorldCoin's Alex Blania, the fundamental business model of social media relies on facilitating human-to-human interaction. The ultimate threat from AI agents isn't merely spam or slop, but the point at which users become so annoyed with inauthentic interactions that the core value proposition of the platform collapses entirely.

The existential threat from large language models is greatest for apps that are essentially single-feature utilities (e.g., a keyword recommender). Complex SaaS products that solve a multifaceted "job to be done," like a CRM or error monitoring tool, are far less likely to be fully replaced.

AI Chatbots Threaten Discovery Platforms like Pinterest and Reddit Most | RiffOn