Google-Agent user agent identifies AI agent traffic in server logs - Search Engine Land
Google-Agent user agent identifies AI agent traffic in server logs Search Engine Land
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Picsart launches “Earn with Picsart”, a monetisation programme with no invite list
The AI design platform is paying creators based on engagement performance rather than audience size, marking its transition from a tool into a platform where creators can earn directly. The launch follows an AI agent marketplace the company introduced in March. Picsart has launched a creator monetisation programme open to all of its more than [ ] This story continues at The Next Web

#29 The Pared-Down Flame
#29 The Pared-Down Flame Build Up, Then Let Go In the previous article, the contours of a design philosophy combining candlelight × blockchain came into view. Today was the day to bring that into implementation. He and I planned to design the data structure for Experience Blocks and the flame computation function. To state the conclusion upfront: it became a session of stripping away what we had built up . We Started by Researching First, we investigated four directions in parallel. Blockchain fundamentals (hash chains, Merkle trees, consensus) Deep dive into Buddhist thought (Five Aggregates, dependent origination, Twelve Links of Dependent Origination) Latest blockchain applications (DID, AI Agent × Blockchain) Event Sourcing pattern (a design that doesn't store state but computes it on
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What Do We Need for an Agentic Society?
arXiv:2604.03938v1 Announce Type: new Abstract: Thirty years ago, Wooldridge and Jennings defined intelligent agents through four properties: autonomy, reactivity, pro-activeness, and social ability. Today, advances in AI can empower everyday objects to become such intelligent agents. We call such objects agentic objects and envision that they can form an agentic society: a collective agentic environment that perceives patterns, makes judgments, and takes actions that no single object could achieve alone. However, individual capability does not guarantee coordination. Through an illustrative scenario of a teenager experiencing bullying and depression, we demonstrate both the promise of coordination and its failure modes: false positives that destroy trust, deadlocks that prevent action, an



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