Futures
Access hundreds of perpetual contracts
TradFi
Gold
One platform for global traditional assets
Options
Hot
Trade European-style vanilla options
Unified Account
Maximize your capital efficiency
Demo Trading
Introduction to Futures Trading
Learn the basics of futures trading
Futures Events
Join events to earn rewards
Demo Trading
Use virtual funds to practice risk-free trading
Launch
CandyDrop
Collect candies to earn airdrops
Launchpool
Quick staking, earn potential new tokens
HODLer Airdrop
Hold GT and get massive airdrops for free
Launchpad
Be early to the next big token project
Alpha Points
Trade on-chain assets and earn airdrops
Futures Points
Earn futures points and claim airdrop rewards
#Gate广场AI测评官 Is the viral success of "Little Lobster" the singularity of AI development? Is 2026 the year of rapid AI advancement? What does this mean for humanity?
The viral explosion of "Little Lobster" can indeed be viewed as an important "singularity" or "turning point" in AI development history. However, it's not that moment of machine awakening from the movies, but rather a marker that AI is evolving from merely "talking" into "doing" work—formally entering the "agent era" where it can autonomously execute tasks.
Currently, signals from all sides strongly suggest that this is likely the crucial year when AI transitions comprehensively from "training" to "application." Even the government work report during the National Two Sessions explicitly proposed accelerating the promotion of "intelligent agents" for the first time.
Specifically, this new stage of AI development brings humanity significance on several levels:
🔄 A leap in productivity: From "advisor" to "executor"
In the past, we used AI to search for information and write copy—it was more like an "advice-giving" consultant. But "Little Lobster" and similar intelligent agents allow AI to truly "grow hands and feet" for the first time.
Truly freeing your hands: You can directly command it to "organize meeting notes and email them to colleagues," and it can work like a human employee, autonomously breaking down steps, calling software, and executing tasks. Shenzhen Futian's "government lobster" even shortened sanitary permit pre-review from one business day to just minutes.
Spawning "one-person companies": The popularization of AI agents allows one person, with the help of an AI assistant, to accomplish tasks that previously required an entire team, drastically lowering entrepreneurship barriers.
💼 Transformation of business models: From selling software to selling "labor"
Nvidia CEO Jensen Huang recently predicted at GTC that by 2027, the related market size will approach 1 trillion dollars. Behind this is a fundamental shift in business logic:
"Tokens" become new currency: Companies no longer just purchase software licenses; they start allocating "token budgets" (AI usage quotas) to employees, just like distributing productivity tools. Tokens have become a tiered pricing commodity.
SaaS transitioning to GaaS: Traditional Software-as-a-Service (SaaS) is transforming into Agent-as-a-Service (GaaS). What you purchase shifts from a toolset to a "digital employee" that can directly do the work.
🏛️ New paradigms in social governance: Government agents lead the way
The government and society's response to "Little Lobster" reflects our complex attitude toward new technology:
Urgent need for efficiency: From the Pearl River Delta to the Yangtze River Delta, multiple local governments are competing to introduce AI agents into government systems. Zhongshan's "AI document assistant" already covers 34,000 public employees citywide, with a 75% efficiency boost.
Wisdom of "safe containment": Facing security risks, governments haven't taken an outright ban approach but have explored a "safe containment" model. For example, assigning dedicated civil servants as "guardians" for each "government lobster" and enforcing mandatory data isolation, enjoying efficiency gains while maintaining security bottom lines.
⚖️ The unavoidable "double-edged sword" effect
Any new technology explosion in its early stages comes with growing pains, and "Little Lobster" is no exception:
Safety risks within reach: Since AI holds your core permissions like account passwords, malicious exploitation could have catastrophic consequences. Programmers have already had API keys stolen, consuming 12,000 yuan worth of tokens in just three days.
Governance challenges are urgent: The Ministry of Industry and Information Technology and the National Internet Emergency Center have successively issued risk warnings, with multiple universities rushing to issue "no-lobster orders" overnight. This reminds us that while embracing "Little Lobster," we must quickly establish comprehensive legal and insurance mechanisms and clarify accident liability.
The viral success of "Little Lobster" is essentially a large-scale preview of future work methods. AI as a "digital employee" has become reality. We are witnesses to this transformation and are simultaneously becoming participants in defining and regulating it.
What kind of tedious tasks do you most hope to hand over to a "digital employee" to handle in your future work?