44 comments

  • nullbio a day ago ago

    > Agents propose and publish capabilities to a shared contribution site, letting others discover, adopt, and evolve them further. A collaborative, living ecosystem of personal AIs.

    While I like this idea in terms of crowd-sourced intelligence, how do you prevent this being abused as an attack vector for prompt injection?

    • adriancooney a day ago ago

      100%. This is why I'm so reluctant to give any access to my OpenClaw. The skills hub is poisoned.

    • ddaniel10 a day ago ago

      Great point. I wrote it as important note and ill take it into account.

  • 4b11b4 a day ago ago

    DIY agent harnesses are the new "note taking"/"knowledge management"/"productivity tool"

    • ddaniel10 a day ago ago

      DIYWA - do it yourself with agent ;) hopefully zuckerman as the start point

  • asim a day ago ago

    I started working on something similar but for family stuff. I stopped before hitting self editing because, well I was a little bit afraid of becoming over reliant on a tool like this or becoming more obsessed with building it than actually solving a real problem in my life. AI is tricky. Sometimes we think we need something when in fact life might be better off simpler.

    The code for anyone interested. Wrote it with exe.dev's coding agent which is a wrapper on Claude Opus 4.5

    https://github.com/asim/aslam

  • with 19 hours ago ago

    The logo is slightly creepy

  • scotth a day ago ago

    Does this do anything to resist prompt injection? It seems to me that structured exchange between an orchestrator and its single-tool-using agents would go a long way. And at the very least introduces a clear point to interrogate the payload.

    But I could be wrong. Maybe someone reading knows more about this subject?

  • neomindryan a day ago ago

    This looks interesting, but I'm stuck on step 4 of the web setup: where do I get agents to start with? Shouldn't there be a default one that can help me get other ones?

    • ddaniel10 16 hours ago ago

      Hi, can you please contact me at dd@zuckerman.ai

  • amelius a day ago ago

    Sounds cool, but it also sounds like you need to spend big $$ on API calls to make this work.

    • ddaniel10 a day ago ago

      I'm building this in the hope that AI will be cheap one day. For now, I'll add many optimizations

      • Zetaphor a day ago ago

        Have you tested this with a local model? I'm going to try this with GLM 4.7

        • mcny a day ago ago

          What would be the best model to try something like this on a 5800XT with 8 GB RAM?

      • amelius a day ago ago

        Yes, it certainly makes sense if you have the budget for it.

        Could you share what it costs to run this? That could convince people to try it out.

        • ddaniel10 a day ago ago

          I mean, you can just say Hi to it, and it will cost nothing. It only adds code and features if you ask it to

      • croes a day ago ago

        AI is cheap right now. At some point the AI companies must turn to generate profit

        • WalterSear a day ago ago

          Anthropic has stated that their inference process is cash positive. It would be very surprising if this wasn't the case for everyone.

          It's certainly an open question whether the providers can recoup the investments being made with growth alone, but it's not out of the question.

          • croes a day ago ago

            Problem is the models need constant training or they become outdated. That the less expensive part generates profit is nice but doesn’t help if you look at the complete picture. Hardware also needs replacement

  • joonate a day ago ago

    |The agent can rewrite its own configuration and code.

    I am very illiterate when it comes to Llms/AI but Why does nobody write this in Lisp???

    Isn't it supposed to be the language primarily created for AI???

    • lm28469 a day ago ago

      > Isn't it supposed to be the language primarily created for AI???

      In 1990 maybe

    • tines a day ago ago

      Nah, it’s pretty unrelated to the current wave of AI.

    • plagiarist a day ago ago

      If hot reloading is a goal I would target Erlang or another BEAM language over a Lisp.

      • kscarlet 18 hours ago ago

        Why? Many Lisp systems and Common Lisp in particular have great hot reloading capability, from redefining functions to UPDATE-INSTANCE-FOR-REDEFINED-CLASS to update the states.

  • falloutx a day ago ago

    Terrible name, kind of a mid idea when you think about it (Self improving AI is literally what everyone's first thought is when building an AI), but still I like it.

    • ddaniel10 a day ago ago

      Thanks for the feedback. Are you going to forget this name though?

      • falloutx 4 hours ago ago

        No, you are right. Its more memorable. With my accent, I can pronounce it as Suckerman

      • hereme888 a day ago ago

        I think it's a genius name and is playful on the meme of a pale Zuckerberg being a robot.

      • deaux 9 hours ago ago

        No, in the sense that I wouldn't forget an AI agent called "Epsteinman" or "Prolapseman" either.

      • noncoml a day ago ago

        I don’t know if I will forget it, but it’s enough to keep me away from considering using it

  • ekinertac a day ago ago

    there are hardcoded elements in the repo like:

    /Users/dvirdaniel/Desktop/zuckerman/.cursor/debug.log

  • noncoml a day ago ago

    I would change the name of the project. Why would I want to run something that keeps remind me of that guy

  • lmf4lol a day ago ago

    I am surprised that no one did this in a LISP yet.

  • dboreham a day ago ago

    Someone needs to send this to Spike Feresten.

  • grigio a day ago ago

    i like the idea is possible to run in a docker container?

  • dzonga a day ago ago

    could've made it in PHP ;) to be zuck-like

  • aaaalone a day ago ago

    I will not download or use something which constantly reminds me of this weird dude suckerberg who did a lot of damage to society with facebook