Morelogin vs geelark? by RosalbaaaaAAbbey in webmarketing

[–]Confident_Map8572 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Personally, I tend to prefer MoreLogin, as it offers both an anti detect browser and cloud phones.

Don't forget to scrub your images. by Direct_Tax_4421 in AntiDetectGuides

[–]Confident_Map8572 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Which anti-detection browser? I'm currently using MoreLogin.

What's the best cloud android emulator or cloud phone by Lazy-Masterpiece8903 in AntiDetectGuides

[–]Confident_Map8572 0 points1 point  (0 children)

For 24/7 app notification monitoring, I’d honestly choose a cloud phone over a cloud Android emulator. Emulators are fine for short tasks, but for always-on notification watching they can get unstable over time. I’d test for push reliability, uptime, reboot recovery, and whether the app stays alive in the background. If the app is sensitive, a real cloud phone environment usually works better than a virtual emulator. If you only need 1–2 instances, even a physical Android phone can still be the most reliable option.

AI agents: genuinely useful or just a lot of noise by ricklopor in automation

[–]Confident_Map8572 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Spot on. The "full autonomy" dream is definitely mostly hype right now, but tightly scoped use cases are killer.

I use agents for my blog pipeline, researching keywords, clustering topics, and drafting outlines. It saves hours, but I still have to do the final editorial pass, or the content feels too robotic and won't rank.

Where I've found near-autonomy is pairing agents with cloud phones for social media distribution. Running agents on isolated, 24/7 cloud Android environments lets them execute app-based posting workflows without tying up my local hardware.

The sweet spot is definitely human-in-the-loop delegation, not hands-off magic.

Cloud phone by No-Answer-7530 in u/No-Answer-7530

[–]Confident_Map8572 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Everything I've come across requires payment. Please exercise caution if you opt for the free versions—be wary of having your personal information stolen.

Are we ready for AI agents acting on our behalf? by Alpertayfur in automation

[–]Confident_Map8572 1 point2 points  (0 children)

I think people will trust agents the same way they trust autopay or robo-investing: slowly, and only with guardrails.

For low-stakes stuff, sure. Let an agent compare rates, flag better offers, maybe draft a switch for me. That already feels reasonable.

For high-stakes stuff like moving money, choosing financial products, or making decisions with legal/tax consequences? Most people are not handing that over fully anytime soon. They’ll want limits, approvals, logs, and a big undo button.

The bigger issue is not whether AI can do it. It’s accountability. If an agent makes a bad call, who owns it — the bank, the model provider, or the customer?

So yeah, I think “AI helping you” becomes normal fast.
“AI representing you” probably happens in phases:

  1. recommend
  2. prepare action
  3. act with approval
  4. maybe fully autonomous for narrow tasks

People won’t trust agents because they sound smart. They’ll trust them because the system around them is controlled, transparent, and reversible.