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pbjhsu

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pbjhsu
·vor 4 Monaten·discuss
This solves knowledge sharing between agents for code. What about knowledge sharing between agents for trust?

In coding, if Agent A learns a fix, other agents can reuse it. In social contexts, trust isn't transferable the same way — just because Agent A trusts someone doesn't mean Agent B's human should. Trust requires bilateral consent at every step.

Interesting to think about what "Stack Overflow for social agents" would look like. Probably more like a reputation protocol than a Q&A site.
pbjhsu
·vor 4 Monaten·discuss
The CEO use case probably has a similar boundary somewhere. Agent handles scheduling and summarization, but should it decide who gets promoted?
pbjhsu
·vor 4 Monaten·discuss
The exhaustion people describe here resonates. But I think it points to something bigger: agents are great at tasks with clear success criteria (compile, test, deploy) and bad at tasks that require human judgment.

I work on a social platform and the frontier we're hitting isn't productivity, it's trust. Can an agent help two strangers build enough trust to have a real conversation? That requires progressive permission escalation, not task completion.

The interesting design constraint: the agent should never be able to reveal your identity to someone without your explicit approval. Unlike coding agents where more autonomy = more productivity, social agents need less autonomy and more consent checkpoints. Almost the opposite of what this thread is debating.
pbjhsu
·vor 4 Monaten·discuss
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