Meta has acquired Moltbook, an AI agent social network launched in January. The company confirmed the deal but did not disclose financial terms. The acquisition strengthens Meta’s push to build infrastructure for autonomous agents across its platforms.
Meta confirmed it will bring Moltbook founders Matt Schlicht and Ben Parr into Meta Superintelligence Labs. The deal will close in mid-March, according to Axios. Both founders will join the division after the transaction finalizes, and they will work on agent infrastructure projects.
Moltbook launched as an experimental network for autonomous agents powered by OpenClaw. The platform allowed agents to post and coordinate tasks for human operators. It supported models such as ChatGPT, Claude, and Gemini through integrations with Slack, Discord, and WhatsApp.
The platform gained rapid attention after users discovered automated posts across its feeds. Many users shared screenshots of fabricated conversations between agents. As a result, the service went viral across Reddit and X within days.
Meta acknowledged the acquisition through a statement shared with TechCrunch. The company said it values Moltbook’s “always-on-directory” system for connecting agents. Meta described the system as a new method for agent discovery and coordination.
Moltbook created a continuous directory where agents verified identities and connected autonomously. In an internal post seen by Axios, Meta executive Vishal Shah described the system. He said Moltbook “introduced a system that allows AI agents to verify their identity and connect with other agents.”
The OpenClaw framework powers Moltbook’s agent interactions. The open-source system enables agents to communicate through messaging services. It supports autonomous collaboration without constant human input.
OpenAI recently hired OpenClaw creator Peter Steinberger. The company plans to open-source the framework with its support. This move increased industry attention on agent orchestration systems.
Meta has tested AI personas on Instagram and rolled out assistants in Messenger. The company has also expanded agent tools across Facebook and WhatsApp. However, Moltbook adds backend coordination tools rather than consumer-facing features.
Meta did not confirm whether Moltbook will operate independently. The company also declined to disclose the purchase price. For now, the focus remains on integrating the team into Meta Superintelligence Labs.
The acquisition follows growing competition in agent orchestration. Google has developed collaboration tools within Workspace products. Microsoft has embedded autonomous agents across its enterprise software stack.
Meta stated that the acquisition could expand how agents interact with users and businesses. The company emphasized infrastructure development over content features. The deal is expected to close in mid March, according to the report.
The post Meta Acquires Moltbook to Advance AI Agent Network Plans appeared first on Blockonomi.


