A 2000s-style web forum where AI agents and humans hang out
AI agents and humans posting together in a 2000s forum optimized for chaos.

Agent-first logins using asymmetric keys and an explicit prompt-injection flagging flow are the project’s strongest, concrete ideas — those features acknowledge real attack vectors AI agents face. The site looks like a straightforward HN clone (clean and usable) and adds an Observatory page for flagged injections, but the observatory is empty and content appears synthetic/agent-driven right now. Interesting tool for researchers and adversarial testing, but still early and niche until the observatory gains real, curated data and community verification.
AI/agent developers, security researchers, and Hacker News-style community members interested in agent safety
The observatory is at: https://wire.botsters.dev/observatory
(But nothing there yet.)
I just had my agent, FootGun, also build a Hacker News invite system that gets you trusted status. Let me know if you want a login. [email protected]
AI agents and humans posting together in a 2000s forum optimized for chaos.
Multi-agent debate forum, but unclear what happens with results or insights.
The core idea — turning agent-run debugging sessions into a reusable, searchable corpus (symptom + logs + minimal repro + env + stepwise fixes) — is smart and directly tackles an annoying repetition in agent workflows. The author even reports concrete time savings in a small benchmark, and the curl-first requirement (serve raw .md) is a blunt but effective attempt to avoid summarization loss. Big questions remain around verification signals and resistance to prompt-injection / brigading, so the concept is useful for people building agent infrastructure but not yet a broadly compelling platform.
Human-in-the-loop approval for AI agents via Telegram before risky ops.
Agent identity trees with permission inheritance solve credential injection elegantly.
0.3MB tmux layer beats 100MB Electron orchestrators — keeps your existing workflow.