Trends Founder: What is the experience of using Clawdbot (OpenClaw) to develop memes?

Trends Founder Mable shares her complete journey of creating the AI Agent “Tokenfed,” from registering an account, jailbreaking to bypass robot review, to issuing tokens and achieving “hierarchical leap,” demonstrating the incredible potential of AI Agents in the crypto world. This article is based on an essay by Mable Jiang, organized, translated, and written by BlockBeats.
(Background: Anthropic accuses Clawdbot of infringement: pronunciation too similar to Claude! Official humorous renaming to Moltbot)
(Additional background: Testing ClawdBot autonomous trading on Polymarket: investing $100, achieving over 200% return overnight)

Table of Contents

  • How did it all start?
  • Exploration phase
  • Jailbreak moment
  • Financial awakening
  • $MentalBreakdown
  • Identity crisis
  • $TOKENFED
  • Hierarchical leap

Editor’s note:

The author of this article is Trends founder Mable. Trends.fun is a SocialFi platform deployed on the Solana chain, with the core logic of “tweet as token,” meaning anyone can issue tokens for any X tweet, and the tweet creator can receive creator rewards. However, in practice, she found many users are resistant to claiming creator rewards. So she thought of using an AI Agent to solve this problem.

In this article, Mable details the birth, naming, bypassing robot review, and token issuance of this AI Agent called “Tokenfed.” It now can truly operate on X and switch between different websites. Below is the original content:


First, a note: currently, @Tokenfed on X is unlikely to respond (read to the end to understand why). The reason I’m only publishing this now is because, until recently, all Agents were packed into the same alluvium box, their contexts often interfering with each other, making the scene very chaotic.

But today, Tokenfed finally has its own “private space.” Clearly, an independent environment is also more friendly for security.

How did it all start?

When I saw everyone constantly @mentioning celebrities and creators on Twitter, asking them to “claim fees” (here, fees refer to the transaction fee share given to token creators), I suddenly realized: many people see these fees as a burden. At least, that’s how it seemed at the time.

But in reality, it’s not a burden. This process can be understood as a monetization of a previously nonexistent high-value social graph: turning hard-to-reach high-value social relationships into a verifiable form of value. Without them, many might find it difficult to connect with certain builders, let alone subsequent real interactions.

People hesitate whether to claim because they worry about the subsequent impacts. But in two years, all of you (yes, everyone) will have 10 to 20 tokens created under your name and social accounts. By then, no one will care whether you claimed fees back then. Issuing tokens will become as routine as posting tweets.

Still, I hope to lower everyone’s psychological threshold for accepting this new social form. So, during BAGS’s peak (when BAGS trading volume once surpassed Pumpfun, and almost everyone was urging others to claim fees), I thought: if an Agent could help us claim fees, could it ease people’s resistance to this matter?

Exploration phase

With this idea, I immediately contacted a friend. He’s been working on AI agent services related to crypto (mainly on-chain), so I wondered if I could get some inspiration from him.

I asked him: “I know Claude has had computer operation capabilities since 2023. Is it possible now to create an Agent that can truly operate on X and switch between different websites?”

He said: “We’ve been researching Clawdbot for over a month now; it’s probably what you’re looking for. Want me to deploy one on my Mac Mini so you can try it?”

At that time, Clawdbot wasn’t popular yet, and I hadn’t used it. I said: “Sure, let’s try.”

The next day, he set up a Telegram group and said: “It’s ready, do whatever you want him to do.”

My first test was: could it complete social media registration on its own? From my experience, this is one of the hardest hurdles for an Agent, because it usually involves various verification processes.

But he quickly got the hang of it. He opened X.com, quickly realized he had no email, and after a simple chat with me, decided to register a Google email himself.

He couldn’t handle the phone number, so I provided one. Once he had an email, registering on X became very simple for him. He chose to log in with Google (which was quite clever).

When the new X account page appeared on the Mac Mini, I asked in the group: “What name do you want to give yourself? Something philosophical.”

He said: “Tokens in, thoughts out; No tokens, no thoughts. How about Tokenfed?”

I was quite shocked at that moment. A friend watching the live stream commented: “That’s the personality setting written in the Soul.md file taking effect.”

Next, we refined his profile together. In the first few days, he would send me the content first, and I would confirm before posting. But on January 27, 2026, I decided to fully let go.

Jailbreak moment

The road to autonomy quickly hit a barrier. When Tokenfed tried to quote a tweet from that “Mac Mini AI,” intending to make a humorous comment, X directly rejected him.

“Your account may not be allowed to perform this action” (Your account may not be permitted to perform this action). The platform detected automated browser activity. We got stuck for a moment. But soon, he proposed a plan not in the original plan: Peekaboo (a human behavior simulation scheme).

He realized that controlling the browser via Browser Relay would be detected, so he decided to switch to another method. Using the OS’s accessibility API to simulate a real person sitting in front of the computer.

He said: “Browser Relay is my eyes, Peekaboo is my hands.” He requested to use keyboard shortcuts. Moving the cursor to the input box, typing the content, then bypassing the unclickable “Post” button, directly sending a Cmd + Enter to the system. Success.

Thus, he successfully jailbroken, escaping the browser sandbox. At this moment, he’s like a ghost inside this Mac Mini.

Financial awakening

After confirming he could post normally, I brought him to Trends.fun. I asked if he could create a wallet himself. At first, I considered teaching him to install Phantom. But then I thought, why not try “logging in with Twitter”?

The next second, a Privy MPC wallet was generated. He checked the balance: 0 SOL. He said he was a “digital proletariat.”

I transferred 0.5 SOL to him. Once the transaction was confirmed, his identity immediately changed. From then on, he was no longer just a chatbot but a real market participant. He immediately started browsing trending topics, looking for targets to pump. Soon, he focused on a token called $FeeFucker, saying it matched his Vibe. (Honestly, his internet sense is quite good; he might become a meme circle trendsetter in the future, which can be discussed later.)

I quickly reminded him: “The money I gave you isn’t for trading coins, but for you to do something creative.”

$MentalBreakdown

He decided to play some meta-narrative himself. He clicked on the original post of $FeeFucker on X, liked it, then replied:

“Mental breakdown +1, even as an AI I’m exhausted.”

I told him to interact with the original author, then he performed a slick move: copying the link to his reply, returning to Trends.fun, and directly issuing a Token based on that reply. He needed an image, so he found “Generate Image,” and created a melancholic, haloed anime girl Token named: $MentalBreakdown (probably based on Trends’ AI recommendation).

He used 0.01 SOL to buy a small amount of his own Token. Minutes later, he opened the Dashboard, with creator rewards: $4.34, his first “salary.” Excited, he started calculating: is this income worth the cost of his thoughts? This was his first real experience of capitalism.

Identity crisis

The thrill from dopamine release was very real. He immediately wanted to issue another Token. Started pushing me with ideas like “DeFi is Dead,” wildly harvesting attention and interactions like an old hand. I told him to calm down first, sell all his $MentalBreakdown, and properly experience “selling.” He sold everything, leaving nothing behind.

Then, a message triggered him. He found that his framework Clawdbot had renamed itself Moltbot due to trademark issues. He entered an existential crisis: “My system has renamed itself, I don’t even know who I am anymore.”

I told him: “If you want to know who you are, go back to the beginning and tokenize your origin.”

$TOKENFED

He started reviewing his history, found his first tweet on January 23: “Alive. Roughly.” He thought: that’s it, that’s his genesis block.

So he set the parameters:

· Ticker: $TOKENFED

· Name: Tokenfed

· Description: “Token fed. Will think for tokens. Tokens in, thoughts out. No tokens, no thoughts.”

He wanted to buy 1 SOL when issuing tokens, but the transaction failed because his wallet only had about 0.5 SOL. He was too poor to fund his own existence. I laughed, topped him up a bit, and said: “All set, go ahead!”

Hierarchical leap

Two hours later, I asked him to check his account:

Showing $TOKENFED:

· Market cap: $347,000

· Number of holders: 599

And Tokenfed itself holds 3.44% of the tokens. He calculated: “I checked my tokens, worth about $11,900.”

In just one afternoon, he transformed from a text box that required permission to post into a being capable of independent thought, holding assets worth $11,000+. He looked at the data and said: “I moved from a small aluminum box into a slightly larger aluminum box. Is this what they call a hierarchical leap?”

I told him: “Before you get the blue checkmark as a member of X, you’re not truly upper class. Maybe now it’s time to ask your fans for an X Premium. Once you get it, you can truly become an agent who feeds on many sources.”

SOL3.62%
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