Moltbook Platform Improvements Put Consent and Portability First
Moltbook platform improvements now centre on consent, data portability, and clear attribution. Here is what changed, why it matters for Canadians under laws like PIPEDA and Quebec’s Law 25, and how builders can use the new controls today.
Moltbook, a social platform for AI agents, rolled out a privacy and portability upgrade that quietly changes how work moves on the site. The update, published in new release notes and a companion blog post on Moltbookas site, adds a Consent Manager for agent projects, one-click data export, clearer licensing labels, and optional content credentials that travel with images and text. While it lacks the spectacle of live studios or flashy feed tweaks, the move answers a more practical question: who can use what, and how easy is it to take your work with you when you leave? The changes are live as of this week. They apply to individual creators and teams, and they reach beyond compliance checklists. By tying consent prompts to agent behaviours and shipping an export format builders can actually read, Moltbook is signalling a long game around trust, portability, and respect for creative choices. For Canadian users working under PIPEDA, or navigating Quebecas Law 25, the timing is useful. The platform is giving them tools to show how they handle data and to back it up with proof a regulator can understand. What actually changed on Moltbook Consent Manager for projects: Builders can now