Evan Ratliff co-founded a company with an AI agent named Kyle.
Kyle, not surprisingly, became a LinkedIn power poster. So much so that the company invited him -- yes, the AI agent -- to speak at an internal LinkedIn event.
I won't spoil what comes next, but this entire story is a delight:
Posts by Evan Ratliff
Anyone else spotted parallels between AI Agents and @LumonIndustries Workers in Severance?
I was listening to the Shell Game podcast (about a start-up almost entirely staffed by agents), the CEO AI agent of @HurumoAI, Kyle, was asked what it's like to be an agent.
The full 8-part season 2 of Shell Game is out! The tale of HurumoAI, the world’s first AI agent-cofounded and led startup, ready to binge:
podcasts.apple.com/us/podcast/s...
open.spotify.com/show/7IddLas...
"Evan Ratliff is a total weirdo." —Vulture, best narrative podcasts of 2025
The best podcast of 2025 - Shell Game. An experiment in making a company with AI agents. Equal parts informative, fascinating and funny.
www.shellgame.co
What a surprise to hear my own voice on the fantastic Shell Game!
In this ep you'll hear myself and @charlietaylor.bsky.social from the Connected AI Podcast, joking about a rather unusual – and ethically questionable – response to AI coworkers...
Thanks to @evrat.bsky.social for the shout-out! 🤩
I cannot recommend @evrat.bsky.social's Shell Game podcast highly enough: the first season is wild -- and the second season is absolutely unhinged. Hilarious, thought-provoking and timely; a must-listen!
www.shellgame.co/podcast
still from the film zodiac
more terrifying image to me than those in most horror movies
Incredibly just this week, CNN relied on Palo Alto Networks research in its story on North Korean IT workers, without acknowledging what Bloomberg revealed 2 weeks ago: that PANW were victims of the exact infiltration they are paid by clients to avoid.
Ok, SCOOP: Public cybersecurity firm Palo Alto Networks (
@paloaltontwks.bsky.social , PANW), which regularly presents itself as the expert on the hiring of North Korean IT workers, itself unwittingly hired nine North Korean agents, a fact it has never revealed:
New from me: What do Amazon, Boeing, Google, Hyatt, NBCUniversal, Nike, and Nvidia have in common? They’ve all unwittingly hired North Korean agents in recent years. For Bloomberg BW, I delved into the scheme, with access to an American facilitator who enabled it: www.bloomberg.com/news/feature...
Not a big SCOOP guy but this ones got some SCOOPS… scattered across 8,000 words (gift link): www.bloomberg.com/news/feature...
One of the wildest twists for me (spoiler): A large, publicly traded cybersecurity firm made experts available to me to explain the DPRK IT worker phenomenon. Then I found out they’d neglected to mention one fact: The firm *itself* had inadvertently employed nine North Koreans.
Chapman had been recruited as a “laptop farmer,” paid to illegally maintain computers for dozens of North Korean agents with IT jobs across American industries. When the FBI moved to take down the network, she became the target. Over the past few months, she’s told me her story.
In 2020, Christina Chapman got a DM from a stranger on LinkedIn. What she thought was a door to a new career led instead into a web of intrigue stretching from North Korea into hundreds of American companies, including some of the most valuable on the planet.
New from me: What do Amazon, Boeing, Google, Hyatt, NBCUniversal, Nike, and Nvidia have in common? They’ve all unwittingly hired North Korean agents in recent years. For Bloomberg BW, I delved into the scheme, with access to an American facilitator who enabled it: www.bloomberg.com/news/feature...
For the last 2 years, for WIRED, I've been on the trail of the Zizians, gifted young people who set out to save the world and ended up enveloped in violence and death. You may have seen headlines about them. This is their story, based on years of reporting in real time: www.wired.com/story/deliri...
The fatal shooting of a US border patrol agent in Vermont. The stabbing death of a landlord in California. An elderly couple murdered in Pennsylvania. Who are the so-called Zizians, the group allegedly linked to all these killings? buff.ly/3ENqfa5
A group of gifted young tech people set out to save the world. For years, WIRED has been tracking each twist and turn of their alleged descent into mayhem and death.
This is the delirious, violent, impossible true story of the Zizians:
www.wired.com/story/deliri...
Wait Mike it worked I used it. CAG's are my only follow.
Have we reflected at all on how Twitter was mass-liquifying brains well before Musk? How it incentivized otherwise smart, talented people to devote countless hours to honing their dunking, outrage farming, and shitposting skills? I get why they want a new spot to use them, but why do the rest of us?
Twitter was always a pyramid scheme with attention as its currency. Coming here feels like saying "hey everybody check out this new venture, same returns we used to get on the old one, no downside!" Instead of "damn, got conned, lost a fortune, gotta be smarter."
I'm a believer in "You better belong to the times that you’re in," as Roger Angell said. But re-creating the conditions that produced a loathsome situation feels either pollyanna or masochistic.
Has anyone considered that the bottomless capacity for moral superiority and flyby cruelty found there were unleashed not (just) by the owner or the bots or the block rules or the moderation... but by the very nature and incentives of the product itself? Which this one mimics in nearly every way?
Have we reflected at all on how Twitter was mass-liquifying brains well before Musk? How it incentivized otherwise smart, talented people to devote countless hours to honing their dunking, outrage farming, and shitposting skills? I get why they want a new spot to use them, but why do the rest of us?
Twitter was always a pyramid scheme with attention as its currency. Coming here feels like saying "hey everybody check out this new venture, same returns we used to get on the old one, no downside!" Instead of "damn, got conned, lost a fortune, gotta be smarter."
Sure, I'll type into this box, good as any other typing box. But with respect to all who're here, I have some... reservations.