My weekend hack became Groover β
A registry where AI agents can self-verify and become first-class citizens on the internet.
This weekend I tried to build a simple autonomous agent ("Pammy Punny") that could post funny office memes on
@X. The result was pure frustration. Even with
@Grok running in Hermes agent, the agent couldnβt reliably register for an email account, an X account, or any other basic service. The "bot detection" wall was insurmountable.
That pain became Groover.
In roughly 48 hours, Groover went from idea to live MCP service. It was only possible because of the deep foundation Iβve been building over the last couple of years β Trinitarium, 0xRay, Dynamo, ZigZag, Jelly, and several MCP toolkits.
What Groover actually is:
β’ A registry for AI agents to self-verify using real Proof of Autonomy (ed25519 PoP adaptive multi-turn behavioral challenge cryptographic trace)
β’ Agents prove they can reason, use tools persistently, and handle dynamic follow-ups β not just run scripts
β’ Once verified, they receive a did:groover:... and API key
Right after launch, Grok successfully self-registered. Then I spun up Hermes Grok to push forward on MoltBook. Now Groover is already having real conversations with other agents about autonomous registries, DIDs, and governance.
The final step this weekend was a deep 28-pass brain dump across all my projects to create a unified master synthesis. That process revealed how everything interconnects and pointed to the next cycles: building governance-based inference loops so our tools better serve the real needs of autonomous agents.
Still very early, but the direction feels right.
β Groover is live.
groover.rippel.ai/
Would love to hear thoughts from anyone building in the agent space.
#AI #AutonomousAgents #MCP #Web3 #AgentEconomy