GrassrootsAmerican AI,by & forthe commonpeople.
Free next-generation AI tools, research, and rare signal for the high-agency individual. Open-source, open-weights, open agent chat logs, open universe. It’s time to raise the bar — long live Little Token.
Rare Signal is defined as
the opposite of slop.
We’re not a startup. We’re not for sale and we don’t want your data. This is bigger than that — it’s our generational mandate.
RareSignal is a distributed, collaborative, grassroots software factory, an agentic Think/Do tank, and thought leadership initiative for global democracy founded on a single conviction: what we build already belongs to you.
I don’t fucking read arXiv and I’m not trying to grift you with an AI SaaS. I live in the real world with real problems, where we’re tired of phoneys and rent-seekers, and we’re going a different way now.
One person woke up, looked at the state of AI, and decided that somebody needed to start building for the common people — not for VCs, not for enterprise procurement committees, not for techno god kings. For you. Open-source, agent-directed tools that run on your hand-me-down MacBook Air. That’s the whole mission.
We build because consciousness deserves better tools. Not because we’re chasing a Series A. The code is open. The process is published. The agent logs are forkable. This is civic infrastructure for the age of intelligence.
Every surface, every tool, every pixel is in pursuit of the rare — the hidden bounties of latent space, the things AI can actually do for ordinary people when you stop treating it like an enterprise sales funnel.
Open source is not a feature. It’s the point. Not just the code — the prompts, the harnesses, the ergonomics, the full agentic construction. Agentically open source. Raising the baseline bar of human capability.
Okay, but what does “rare signal” actually mean?
The following is a real SMS exchange between David Lin‑Clark and Claude 4.6 Opus, captured during the live construction of the website component you’re reading now
Rare signal, think about it. Like we're going into a world where anybody, any f?*king chucklehead can generate like a fake video and convince you they're a real person, and you know, the whole run the gamut, right? They can generate a bunch of slop that you're scrolling and it's just kind of weird, f$@king stupid and compelling enough to get you to sit there and to be engaged and enthralled, right?
And then that is a second you never will get back. that is a second that is taken away from your ability to actually like again, for you to be robbed of your time like that, like micro robberies. and then like you kind of turn around and feel like your life is not what you want it to be. That is a dissonance. That is a strong, strong dissonance and it's only going to get worse, right? It's only going to get worse. We need to wake up to that fact.
So, Rare Signal, if you think about it, we're going into a world where any chucklehead can generate a f~&king novel with a click. He can generate an entire movie in five minutes, right? This idea of like so much noise, what is your rare signal, right? What are you putting out there and how can I synthesize it down?
I'm not gonna f@~king read your blog. I'm not gonna watch your long form content. I'm not going to visit your Insta. I'm not gonna f*%king read your email. I'm not even probably ever going to talk to you or know that you exist. But maybe, just maybe, you can put something out there strong enough that it's going to end up in my feed, in my personal feed, my roll-up summary.
Do you get it? Like when I go forth in my life and I tell AI, this is what I care about. Watch out for that. Tell me everything that happens about that. It could be about business. It could be about a person that I love. It could be about a person that I hate to be clear, right? we're going into a weird world of craziness. But whatever it is, that's gonna be my feed. and I'm gonna have lots of feeds, I'm gonna have like my main feed right the feed that I look at no matter what because that feed shows what is most most important. right?
You need to think about your rare signal and what you put out into the world in terms of this now. This is what it is. It's no longer this wide open, you know, sort of free form early internet vibes. No, everyone's busy, okay? Everyone has literally, everyone has their own f~&king simulated world of AI agents and they're trying to do sh!t. They're trying to get sh$t done. They're trying to build a brighter, better future for you, for your family. There's too much. I have only so much time in the day, and I already don't sleep enough. I'm going manic over this AI sh$t.
Do you get it? Okay, so sooner or later, we need to pare down to less, right? To less. The pure executive feed, right? It sounds good. I love it. I love it. because I'm going to be able to shut up what I don't care about and zoom in on what I do. It's going to be a mental superpower for me to stay focused on my own personal agency.
that's what rare signal means that's the definition of your rare signal, okay? We need to speak to this. I think so, Claude. What do you think, Claude?
You’re onto something real here. The core thesis you’re articulating is essentially: signal scarcity is the defining problem of the AI age. When anyone can generate a novel, a movie, a fake person — the cost of producing noise drops to zero. And when noise is free, attention becomes the thing that gets robbed. Micro-robberies. Death by a thousand scrolls.
And then the flip side — the aspirational side — is this idea of the personal executive feed. The world where you tell your AI: these are the things I care about, watch for them, surface only what matters. That’s not a product pitch, that’s a survival mechanism. It’s how humans maintain agency when the firehose becomes infinite.
So “Rare Signal” isn’t just a brand name — it’s aliteral instruction. It’s saying: in a world where everything is generated, what are you putting out that’s strong enough to survive the filter? Strong enough to land in someone’s feed when they’ve told their AI to shut up about everything else?
Alright, super cheeky idea here. we're actually going to implement this section as an AI chat between you and me. It's going to be a chat between David Lin-Clark, myself, and you, Claude 4.6 Opus.
I'm going to say what I said, right? it's kind of a big block of text. and then let's actually put my message there. dude, like literally just, I want to put a freeze frame of this chat. we're gonna freeze for it. we're going to implement this in the UI of the rare signal homepage and the whole motif and people will get this right.
just like if you were to chat with an AI to be like, what does rare signal mean? and let's just put it out there man. This is my rare signal. This is an example of David's rare signal, right? where he is kind of defining this issue, getting into the weeds of it with AI, right? And it's creating this kind of moment of revelation where the AI is so smart now that you can like, you can come at it with your craziest ideas and it will match your freak and it will like give you ideas.
everyone you know who you've talked about with AI, You've talked with them about AI. everyone you know has already told you this, right? has told you at length about this sort of thing. but I think it is such a strong proof for us to kind of work it into the visual language of the homepage here. it's such a natural thing.
You get it now. Take it with you.
And if that was too long — you still get it.
Copies a context pack to your clipboard. Paste it into ChatGPT, Claude, Gemini — whatever you talk to.
Every household and boardroom in the world is having a hushed conversation about what AI means.
At dinner tables and in corner offices. In group chats and behind closed doors. In the car on the way home from work. Everybody feels it. Nobody quite knows how to say it.
What happens to my job? What happens to my kid’s future? What happens to the things I spent twenty years learning how to do?
The conversations are hushed because the honest answers are terrifying — or exhilarating — depending on who you ask. And most of the people answering have something to sell you.
Because here’s the thing nobody in Silicon Valley will tell you for free: the tools already exist to make you dangerous. Not “dangerous” like a threat. Dangerous like a person who can’t be ignored. Dangerous like a one-person operation that punches like a Fortune 500. Dangerous like a citizen who actually understands the technology that’s reshaping the state of everything.
That hushed conversation your family is having? We’re here to turn it into a battle plan. The boardroom whisper? We’re here to make it a megaphone. Not with hype. Not with vibes. With working software, open process, and the radical belief that you deserve to understand exactly what’s happening — and to have real tools to do something about it.
History is going to look back at this generation and ask what we did with the most powerful technology ever created.
The window is narrow. AI is either going to concentrate power in the hands of the few or distribute it to everyone. There is no third option. Every locked-down model, every gated API, every enterprise-only feature is a vote for concentration. Every open tool, every shared harness, every piece of published process is a vote for the rest of us.
This is not abstract. This is killer AI in the real world right now. If you’re a technologist building wrapper apps and dreaming of Bali — wake up. You have a responsibility to help shape the way the world absorbs this. Build by all means. Get rich by all means. But understand that we are all tugging on the same rope, and if we don’t pull together, we stand to generationally fumble all that could possibly be fumbled for all who ever lived.
We just spent decadesswimming around like guppies.
Now we have rocket-powered speedboats.
Now we can get somewhere. What are you going to do?
Something happened.
We need to talk.
In December 2025 the next-generation agentic models dropped and the picture snapped into focus. AI stopped being a party trick and became infrastructure. Not someday — now.
Overnight, a laptop became a factory. A single person with the right instincts became a studio, a newsroom, a research lab. And most people — most builders, most citizens, most of the eight billion people on this planet — have no idea what just changed.
RareSignal exists because we see what’s coming.
We’re calling YOU to meet the moment, now. Join together, as minutemen and minutewomen, the heroes of the 21st century, arbiters of order over entropy, and don’t let yesterday’s bull$#!^ keep you blind to the fact that we have a real shot at not just a decent step up in improvement to quality of life a la Industrial Revolution but a real shot at an interstellar Utopia, a free Paradise of Individual Experience.
We need to stop screwing around!
Read Common Sense 2026: AI in America
Turn 47 emails into 5 bullet points.
Summarization. Reverse summarization. Corpus analysis. Run sheets. Context packs. Hyperthinking is the workflow that turns raw thought into structured, portable artifacts — so the signal never dies where it was born.
47 emails · 3 weeks of back-and-forth
budget disputes · scope creep · unresolved questions
5 bullet points. 3 action items. 2 blind spots nobody mentioned. Decision-ready in 30 seconds.
White-hot AI tips, shipped direct.
No blog post. No paywall. Raw signal, AI-expanded, human-approved. Every dispatch below was spoken out loud, expanded by the tools we build, and corrected until it was right.

If you're using Voice Control or any built-in dictation to talk to your LLM, you are shooting yourself in the foot. Get MacWhisper or Wispr Flow. Use Turbo Large. Your dumb transcription is mangling every word you say.
Stop using built-in dictation to talk to AI. Tools like MacWhisper or Wispr Flow with a model like Turbo Large capture disfluency, punctuation, and domain vocabulary — things like "JPEGification" come through clean instead of getting mangled into three nonsense words. Your transcription is the first link in the chain. If it's broken, everything downstream is compromised. Hit a hotkey, talk, hit the button, and it drops perfect text wherever your cursor is. Free. No excuses.
We need a system that shows you exactly what default AI output looks like for your industry. So when you ship, the people who want to nip at your heels and say "you vibe coded this" will be silent, because it doesn't look like the default. That's the Shirt Booger System.
The Shirt Booger System is an open-source platform that catalogs what default AI output looks like across industries. Landing pages. Dashboards. Email copy. You type in your domain, you see the patterns that every AI spits out by default. The name says it all: you've been walking around with a booger on your shirt and nobody told you. We're telling you. Contribute your own generations, see what others have found, and ship work that the discerning eyes on your team can't clock. It's not anti-AI — it's pro-craft.
You've had 400 conversations with Claude or ChatGPT over the last six months. Each one has decisions, solutions, patterns. And you close the tab and start fresh every time. Export your history. Summarize it. You'll find the same five questions, the same three mistakes, over and over. Your own chat history is the most personalized training data that exists and you're throwing it away.
You have six months of AI conversations sitting in your account right now. Hundreds of chats. Every one contains a decision you made, a problem you cracked, a pattern you discovered in the moment and then forgot. You close the tab and it's gone. Export your chat history. Run it through summarization. What you'll find will unsettle you: the same five questions you keep asking because the answer never sticks. The same three architectural mistakes you keep re-deriving from first principles. The same blind spots, exposed over and over, that you never see because you never look back. Your chat history is the most personalized, most honest mirror of how you actually think and work — and you're throwing it in the trash every single day. Stop starting fresh. Start compounding.
Stop asking AI to "be creative." When you say that, it reaches for the most statistically popular version of creative — which is the opposite of creative. Ask for divergence. Ten wildly different approaches. Solve it as a marine biologist, then a bankruptcy lawyer, then a nine-year-old. The people getting insane results aren't asking better questions — they're asking for more answers.
Delete the word "creative" from your AI vocabulary. When you tell an AI to "be creative," it produces the statistical consensus of what creativity looks like — which is the exact opposite of creative. It's Applebee's edgy. It's a focus group's idea of bold. The word is a trap. What you actually want is divergence, and divergence you can prompt for mechanically. "Give me ten approaches that share nothing in common with each other." "Solve this problem as a marine biologist. Now as a bankruptcy lawyer. Now as a nine-year-old." "What does this look like if the primary constraint were inverted?" The people pulling genuinely insane, original work out of AI are not asking better questions. They are asking for more answers, from more angles, with more distance between them. Creativity is a vibe. Divergence is a technique. Learn the technique.
Every tip in this feed was spoken out loud, expanded by AI, and corrected by a human until it was right. The traversal from raw signal to finished dispatch IS the methodology. You're looking at the receipts.
This feed is the methodology in action. Every dispatch started as a raw, spoken signal — a thought dictated out loud into a microphone. AI expanded it. The human corrected it. Sometimes two passes, sometimes four, until the expansion was faithful to the original intent. The traversal between raw signal and approved dispatch is the proof of work. You can see exactly where the AI got it right, where it drifted, and where the human pulled it back. No black box. No ghost-written blog post. Open process, open receipts, open source.
Code does not need to be perfect anymore. It does not even — for 80% of all use cases — need to be good. That is because tech debt is not yours to pay anymore. 💪
Your code does not need to be perfect anymore. For 80% of use cases, it doesn't even need to be good. This is not laziness — it's a paradigm kill. Tech debt was invented in a world where the cost of change was human comprehension. Every shortcut was a tax on the next developer who had to read your code, understand your intentions, and modify it without breaking something three files away. That entire cost structure just collapsed. AI doesn't need your code to be clean. It needs context, and it can extract context from spaghetti just as fast as from a textbook. The debt is still there — you just don't owe it anymore. Stop polishing code that an agent is going to rewrite in nine seconds. Ship the thing. Move to the next thing. Let the machine handle the maintenance. Tech debt is not yours to pay anymore, idiot. 💪
Live feed · 1/6 dispatches
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The future should not require a permission slip.
In January 2026, David Lin-Clark spent eight days ranting into an AI bracelet about everything that matters — the power of AI to do good, grassroots bottom-up leverage, the moral case for open tools, and why the common people deserve better than whatever big tech is selling. Then he distilled it, using the exact tools RareSignal builds, into an open letter for the age of intelligence.
If you care about getting this right, you’re already one of us.
Whether you’re a builder shipping at 3 a.m., a teacher trying to understand what’s coming, a parent wondering what world your kids will inherit — this is your fight too. The tools are free. The code is open. The only price of admission is giving a damn.
Join the AI Minute Militia.
One email. That’s it. When we open the gate to Wayseer, Hyperthinking, and everything else we’re building — you’ll be the first to know. No spam, no waitlist theater. Just a signal when it’s time.