Recently, the biggest gossip in the AI agent field is about the founder of AI16Z and Eliza framework, Key Gomez, who is the founder of Swarms. 'He really doesn't know how to code, but neither does CT. I tried to warn them, and it resulted in hatred. They love this 19-year-old high school dropout, even though a Google search of his name reveals a long history of fraud. What can we do? These people simply don't care 🤷♂️.' Swarms then countered, 'Can you point out an example of erroneous code so we can fix it? 😊' Later, Key Gomez posted a screenshot and GitHub link as evidence, saying that Key Gomez is a thief and a fraud, and suggested he take YouTube courses before trying to code 😂. However, Shaw himself is a highly abstract person, constantly using foul language and engaging in online battles on Twitter. He jumped on the A16Z bandwagon to gain fame. Later, the community issued a lowercase eliza token, and Shaw also promoted it on Twitter. The next day, he released his own uppercase ELIZA, with most tokens held by the founding team, which directly caused the lowercase eliza to crash, leading to widespread complaints from the community. Moreover, Shaw can post over a hundred times a day, being a high-intensity online surfer, and he has insulted too many people 😅. In short, if you have technical skills, you can check out Swarms' code to see if it’s really impressive or if it has been plagiarized. If you lack technical skills, you might consider buying some Swarms tokens since their price has plummeted, treating it as a lottery ticket.