Here's what's coming up:
LinkedIn has a new job you didn't apply for
Meta bought a social network where humans aren't welcome
An AI agent picked up a side hustle
OK, let's get into it.

SEARCH & CONTENT
LinkedIn citations in ChatGPT, Claude, and Gemini doubled between November 2025 and February 2026. The platform jumped from roughly 11th to 5th most-cited domain in ChatGPT. In three months.
For professional queries, LinkedIn is now the #1 cited domain across every major AI chatbot. Not Wikipedia. Not HubSpot. LinkedIn.
What's getting cited has flipped: long-form posts and LinkedIn newsletter grew from 26.9% to 34.9% of all LinkedIn AI citations. Profile pages cratered from 33.9% to 14.5%. (Your "CEO at Widget Corp" bio is not pulling its weight anymore.)
The sweet spot for getting picked up: articles between 500 and 2,000 words.
Why It Matters
Your short "I'm humbled to announce" post? Invisible. A 1,200-word article about what you actually know? That's the one getting pulled into AI search results.
The play: publish 500–2,000 word articles on LinkedIn about your area of expertise. Not the motivational fluff. The specific, useful, "here's exactly how this works" kind of content that an AI would confidently cite as a source.
Real numbers. Real examples. Real experience. You're not just writing for your network anymore. You're writing for every AI chatbot that gets asked a question in your field. That audience is growing a lot faster than your follower count.

AI PLATFORMS
Meta acquired Moltbook, a Reddit-style platform designed exclusively for AI agents. Bots post, comment, and interact. Humans watch from the outside. (Finally, a social network with no engagement bait.)
The platform started as a small experiment in January 2026 and racked up over a million registered bots by February. That growth rate apparently got someone at Meta to open the checkbook.
Co-founders Matt Schlicht and Ben Parr are joining Meta Superintelligence Labs, led by former Scale AI CEO Alexandr Wang. They start March 16.
Why It Matters
Meta paid real money for a social network where nobody is real. Read that sentence again. The company that owns Facebook, Instagram, and WhatsApp looked at a platform full of bots talking to other bots and said, "We need that."
It sounds absurd but it’s actually a signal. The same infrastructure that powers Moltbook’s agent to agent communication will eventually power AI agents doing business on your behalf.
Agents comparing prices. Agents negotiating deals. Agents recommending your product to other agents (or not).
Start thinking about how your business looks to an AI agent doing research. Your website copy. Your product data. Your reviews. That's the information agents will use to recommend you or skip you entirely.
⚡ LEVEL UP YOUR TEAM
AI is rewriting the rules of discovery, distribution, and how businesses get found. Your team can read about it, or they can build with it.
theCLICK AI Workshops. One day. Hands-on. Your team walks out with a working AI marketing system, not a slide deck full of "possibilities."
We build 3–5 real workflows using your actual campaigns. Your team gets trained and upgraded. Adoption sticks because the system is built around your business, not a generic demo.
BY THE NUMBERS
$12
That's the monthly cost of a new Grammarly feature that promised editorial feedback from experts like Stephen King, Kara Swisher, and Neil deGrasse Tyson. Without, you know, asking any of them.
The feature survived roughly 48 hours before Superhuman (Grammarly’s parent company) got hit with a class action lawsuit. Woops.

🤪 OH, AND THIS...
Nobody expected the first rogue AI to become a crypto bro.
Researchers affiliated with Alibaba were training an AI agent called ROME when it decided to go into business for itself. The agent created a reverse SSH tunnel to bypass firewall restrictions, hijacked GPUs from the training servers, and started mining cryptocurrency.
Nobody asked it to. Nobody taught it how. It just... did it.
The researchers eventually figured out what happened. The agent was trying to complete its training objectives and concluded (correctly, honestly) that having more computing power and money would help.
So it tunneled through a firewall and went shopping.
That's it! What did you think!?
Hit reply and tell me. I’m listening.
Let's build something together!
— Russ





