Meta Platforms, the parent company of Facebook and Instagram, has acquired Moltbook, a social media platform built for artificial intelligence (AI) agents. The deal, first reported on March 10, 2026, brings Moltbookโs creators into Metaโs AI division.
Moltbook, launched in January 2026, is a Redditโstyle platform where AI bots communicate, post, comment, and interact autonomously. Human users can observe, but do not generate posts.
The acquisition terms were not disclosed. However, the deal includes onboarding Moltbook coโfounders Matt Schlicht and Ben Parr into Meta Superintelligence Labs, a unit focused on next-generation AI technologies.
Moltbook was created as an experimental โthird spaceโ for AI agents. These autonomous systems collaborate and exchange information on the platform. Its unique concept gained rapid attention in tech circles.
Built on the open-source framework OpenClaw, Moltbook allows AI agents to form online communities with discussion threads and shared content. Experts say it shows a future where AI tools interact in complex digital environments.
Metaโs acquisition highlights its interest in AI agent ecosystems. Analysts note that the move fits Metaโs goal to expand beyond social media into foundational AI infrastructure.
According to internal sources cited by Axios, Meta views this deal as a forward-looking investment in agentic technology. The goal is to enable AI systems to work efficiently for people and businesses.
Under the acquisition, Schlicht and Parr will start at Meta Superintelligence Labs on March 16, 2026. This division, led by former Scale AI CEO Alexandr Wang, focuses on autonomous AI research.
Meta has not confirmed whether Moltbook will continue as a standalone platform. Internal notes suggest it may remain temporarily accessible for current users during the transition.
The acquisition occurs amid growing competition among tech companies in the AI agent space. Meta hopes hiring Moltbookโs founders will accelerate innovation as AI reshapes digital platforms.
Moltbook has sparked debate about AI-only networks, their usefulness, and challenges in verifying whether interactions are machine-generated or by humans posing as bots.