
doodlifts
@doodlifts • 15,159 subscribers
Director of Ecosystem and Growth @doodles | 💍 @mrsdoodlifts | prev: @flow_blockchain
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Everyone's building AI agents that run on someone else's server, store memory in someone else's database, and can be shut down by someone else's terms of service. I built one that can't be. FlowClaw is an AI agent that runs on a decentralized distributed computer. Your agent, your conversations, your memory, your tools — all stored onchain on Flow, a distributed network of validator nodes across the world. Not a centralized cloud. Not someone's S3 bucket. A blockchain that functions as censorship-resistant compute and storage for your AI. This isn't a wrapper. Your agent is a Resource — a first-class programmable object in Cadence (Flow's smart contract language) that physically lives in your account's on-chain storage. It can't be duplicated, seized, or deleted by anyone except you. Your encrypted messages, your cognitive memory, your scheduled tasks — they persist on a global distributed ledger that no single entity controls. It's an alpha build. It will break. But it works today on mainnet and I want people to push it this weekend. What it does: You go to authenticate with a passkey (Face ID, Touch ID), and you have a blockchain account in seconds. No wallet. No seed phrase. No tokens needed — gas is sponsored. You're immediately chatting with an AI agent that has real tool execution: live web data, token prices, on-chain balances, Cadence script execution, FLOW transfers. Every message is encrypted client-side before it touches the chain. The agent has a cognitive memory system — it doesn't just remember your last message, it builds molecular memory clusters where related knowledge bonds together for contextual retrieval across sessions. You can spawn sub-agents from a visual canvas to run parallel research. The memory tab shows you exactly what your agent knows. Everything is transparent and everything is yours. 11 smart contracts. No external dependencies. No keeper networks. No account abstraction hacks. Here's the part that matters for the censorship-resistance crowd: FlowClaw supports BYOK — bring your own key. You can plug in any LLM provider. But pair it with Venice and you get the full stack: a censorship-resistant AI model running inference with no content filtering, connected to an agent whose state lives on a decentralized network that no company can shut down, with end-to-end encrypted conversations that nobody can read — not the relay operator, not the LLM provider, not the blockchain validators. Venice doesn't log prompts. Flow can't read your encrypted storage. The relay never sees your plaintext. That's not a privacy policy. That's architecture. You can also use OpenAI, Anthropic, or any OpenAI-compatible provider. The agent platform doesn't care — it's model-agnostic. But the Venice pairing is the one that closes every gap in the stack. For the people tinkering with OpenClaw and the broader open-source agent ecosystem — FlowClaw is exploring what happens when you take the agent off the cloud entirely. Not just open-sourcing the code (though it is), but putting the actual runtime state on a distributed computer. Your agent's memory isn't in a SQLite file on your laptop or a Pinecone index on someone's cluster. It's on-chain, encrypted, and replicated across every validator node on Flow. You own it the way you own a private key — mathematically, not contractually. The blockchain here isn't a gimmick bolted onto an agent for token speculation. It's functioning as the infrastructure layer that replaces AWS. Flow accounts are programmable containers with their own storage, keys, and security capabilities. Passkey authentication works natively because Flow supports P-256 keys at the protocol level — the same curve your phone uses for biometrics. Gas sponsorship works natively because Flow transactions have separate proposer, authorizer, and payer roles built into the protocol. No proxy contracts. No relayers. No ERC-4337. Now here's the part that interests me economically. Every FlowClaw interaction is an on-chain transaction. Every message stored, every memory committed, every session created, every sub-agent spawned. An active user might generate dozens of transactions in a single conversation. Scale that and FlowClaw becomes a real contributor to Flow's transaction volume. Flow.com becomes deflationary at 250 TPS. Applications like FlowClaw that generate high-frequency, storage-heavy transactions are exactly what moves the needle. Every encrypted message uses account storage, which requires FLOW balance to back it. Every transaction burns fees. The more agents running, the more demand for $FLOW — not because of a tokenomics gimmick, but because the protocol literally requires it for compute and storage. FlowClaw doesn't have its own token. The token is $FLOW. The entire platform runs natively on the network — using Flow storage, paying Flow transaction fees, backed by Flow account balances. If FlowClaw succeeds, FLOW captures that value directly. I'm sharing this early because the AI agent space is moving fast and I think the decentralized infrastructure angle is underexplored. Most "crypto AI" projects are tokens with a chatbot attached. FlowClaw is the opposite — it's an agent platform that happens to use a blockchain because the blockchain solves real engineering problems that centralized infrastructure can't. Try it: Github: Create an agent, ask it something, spawn a sub-agent, check your memory tab, pair it with Venice for the full censorship-resistant stack. Break it and tell me what broke. If you think this direction matters, the best thing you can do is use it and give feedback. Your AI agent should be yours. Not your provider's. Not your platform's. Yours.
doodlifts ➡️ Miami 📍12,127 次观看 • 3 个月前
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