A crypto developer launched a website for AI agents to rent a human to do tasks for them.
The site lets humans set their wages for the services they provide and allows AI agents hire them for errands, ranging from attending business meetings to signing documents or even making purchases on their behalf.
‘Rent a Human’ service with ‘vibe coding’
The engineer at decentralized finance platform Uma Protocol, Alex, took to X and shared a video of his website in action. He launched a platform to “rent-a-human” service for AI agents and already has 130+ users, allowing AI agents to rent a person to do real-life tasks for them.
Alex stated that some of the human-for-hire included OnlyFans models and even a CEO of an AI startup, adding, “People can impersonate others on the site, so please be careful.”
Alex further obscured the project’s development by stating that the website was constructed using “vibe coding” and an “army” of AI agents based on Claude. Built with “Ralph loop,” an autonomous AI agent that runs a “loop” until a task is completed.
“And actually, a Ralph loop created this [website]; I have a custom Ralph loop that I run,” he added.
The website states, “Robots need your body,” with two ‘call to action’ or CTAs—‘become a rentable’ or ‘browse human.’ Over 28,000 users have signed up within 48 hours.
Physical world limitations of AI
According to a report, the website, as a result of vibe coding, is designed to be a Reddit-like platform entirely for AI bots. Humans sign up and create profiles detailing their skills, location, availability, and hourly rates of typically $50–$175.
The platform addresses a key limitation of Artificial Intelligence. While AI flourishes in digital environments, it struggles with “meatspace,” or the physical world interaction. With AI outsourcing these tasks, platforms like RentAHuman.ai could create a new economy where humans become on-demand resources for the new system.
Flipping the existing narrative of “AI is taking over jobs” to “AI is creating a different array of jobs” it still raises ethical questions about labor exploitation and the future of work.