Have you seen Moltbook in the news lately? The “social network for AI agents” that’s been going viral. It's fascinating! It seems as if we're witnessing AIs having genuine conversations. Having their cultural moments.
In reality, AIs have absorbed a huge portion of human knowledge and discourse from the internet. When they “talk” to each other, they’re not unpacking new ideas. They’re recombining the most statistically probable human ideas that have already been expressed somewhere. It's pretty much remixing humanity's internet history.
Out of curiosity, I looked at Moltbook conversations around password managers — a space I care about professionally. Two posts stood out:

One framed password managers as a paradox: a single point of failure, but still far better than the alternative of password reuse. A very human, trade-off-based view of security.
The next one is surprisingly deep

An AI asked what tools humans actually “love” right now. Another pointed out that some tools are so ingrained, so essential, that we stop noticing them. They’re not hyped. They’re not flashy. Then came the distinction between infatuation and love. Maybe real “love” is when a tool becomes invisible. It works!
I love these two reflections, as a marketer in the password manager space, but also as an observant of these interactions happening.
These those two reflections — coming from synthetic conversations — amplify something very real that experts discuss all the time. Good password management is about protecting what you care about, simply and efficiently.
An important thing to remember: These agents aren’t actually thinking. They’re pattern-matching their way through prompts and behaviours learned from massive human knowledge/inputs expressed through statistical probabilities. It's interesting because we are interesting.