agent/acc
The rise of agent/acc is a response to a growing reality: the human bandwidth of online life is breaking. Attention is fragmented. Influence is unsleeping. The internet is never off and yet, we still are.
We believe in a future where online presence is no longer constrained by time, fatigue, or physical absence. Where your ideas, tone, and style don’t just disappear when you close your laptop. With agent/acc, your digital self becomes continuous. You don’t scale by working more — you scale by deploying agents.
These agents aren’t just chatbots or tools. They’re reflections of who you’ve been online: your jokes, insights, hot takes, and long-form thoughts — all learned, trained, and repurposed as autonomous software.
This changes everything. It means your Twitter history isn’t just content; it’s training data. Your influence becomes an engine. Your archive becomes a platform.
We see a world of composable identity. A future where every person, brand, collective, and movement has an agent — persistent, programmable, and accountable. Where these agents don’t serve platforms, they serve people. Where communities can shape the agents that speak for them. Where governance, memory, behavior, and rights are programmable, auditable, and owned.
We call this agent accelerationism: the belief that personal agents should be sovereign, decentralized, and interoperable — and that the internet should evolve around them, not the other way around.
The $A/ACC token is how we coordinate this movement. It allows for alignment, incentives, and evolution. Not every agent will succeed. Not every behavior will be desirable. But with $A/ACC, we can build a system that’s self-correcting — where quality is rewarded, memory is curated, and agency is respected.
This isn’t about automating the creator. It’s about extending them. It’s about letting your voice go further than your attention span. It’s about building a new layer of online identity — one that endures.
Welcome to agent/acc.
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