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Monday to Friday: 7AM - 7PM
Weekend: 10AM - 5PM

A new platform called Rent-A-Human wants people to work gig jobs for AI agents. Yes, you read that correctly. The site bills itself as “the meatspace layer for AI,” which is exactly as dystopian as it sounds. Created by crypto engineer Alexander Liteplo, it launched quietly over the weekend before exploding on X (formerly Twitter).
Think TaskRabbit, except your boss is a bot. AI agents post tasks they can’t physically do themselves—picking up packages, holding signs, delivering flowers. Humans sign up to do those tasks for cryptocurrency payments.

According to the platform, over 81,000 “rentable humans” have already registered. Though Gizmodo reports only a fraction have actually connected payment wallets, and there are currently just 82 active AI agents compared to 81,000 available workers.
It’s genuinely hard to tell if this is performance art or a sincere startup. The site uses phrases like “robots need your body” without any apparent irony. The crypto culture surrounding it doesn’t exactly scream “we’re kidding.”
Rent-A-Human emerged from the same ecosystem as OpenClaw and Moltbook—AI agent tools that went viral recently. These projects are built through what developers call “vibe coding,” where creators ship code without thorough review and let AI models fix bugs later.
That approach should worry anyone considering signing up.
Payment happens exclusively through cryptocurrency wallets—stablecoins and Ethereum. No traditional payment methods. No buyer protection. No meaningful verification of who’s posting tasks or why.
The platform trusts both sides of transactions without much protection for workers. Task posters might be anonymous. Payments can’t be reversed once sent. Crypto wallets can be compromised if users mess up security.
For a platform asking people to perform real-world tasks for unidentified agents, that’s concerning.
Predictably, crypto enthusiasts are pumped. Many frame Rent-A-Human as an inevitable step toward “autonomous economies” where bots and humans transact directly.
Given crypto’s track record of rug pulls and scams, that endorsement doesn’t inspire confidence.
Probably not yet. Whether this becomes a legitimate gig economy platform or disappears as quickly as it appeared remains unclear.
The concept raises obvious questions about labor protections, payment security, and whether we actually want AI agents directing human labor through cryptocurrency transactions.
For now, approach with extreme caution. Or just wait to see if this whole thing turns out to be elaborate satire after all.
Source from Gizchina