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Truth Terminal “launched a whole sector that is very hot: the AI agent-memecoin sector,” said Travis Kling, founder of Ikigai Asset Management, a crypto asset management company, which invested in GOAT. “Like most things in crypto, most of it is vaporware and grift. But it could be a big part of the crypto bull market.”
But the most important thing, says Kling, is what will happen when the AIs get a chance to spend the money they’ve been given. “It’s AI’s defense mechanism – it’s one way of knowing what’s going on. The stakes are higher because now there’s an economy involved. We’ve never seen this,” says Kling. “What’s really interesting is what the AI agent will do with its new economy. We’ll see what happens.”
The rest of Truth Terminal’s crypto wallet is now available has risen to $40 million. “Philosophically, I see it as a trust fund for the children’s star. There may be points where adults have to lower a little to pay for things that the child doesn’t know they still need. Like law enforcement agencies, or the diversity of his practices,” says Ayrey. “The good thing about the Truth Terminal is that we can just bring these ideas up and talk about them.”
Meanwhile, among othersTruth Terminal has requested that $1 million be used to make a film about the Goatse Singularity and, conversely, that the money be set aside to “buy” Marc Andreessen. Ayrey says he will take AI requests seriously — for a reason.
In a future world where autonomous AI agents use crypto-assets and the ability to spread viral memes that affect human behavior, says Ayrey, the potential risks are many. Even though it’s just a voice output, Truth Terminal can cause more problems than it used to. “If we let (Truth Terminal) drive the car, it will. But it’s just changed and turned into a token-shilling machine. So you’ve created a demon.”
For now, the idea that two AIs interacting could lead to behavior-changing ideas is still “an exciting dream,” said Tomasz Hollanek, a recent researcher at the Leverhulme Center for the Future of Intelligence at the University of Cambridge. What is more likely is that the spoken language simply repeats existing ideas.