Proxy Tiktok Better ✰
Sarah had 300 followers. Mostly strangers who liked her videos of sourdough starters and her cat, Gyoza, falling off the couch. But last week, she’d posted a 15-second clip: herself in the breakroom, lipsyncing to a Chappell Roan song, with the text overlay: “When your boss says ‘we’re a family’ but the family doesn’t have a 401k.”
Sarah sat in her cubicle, hands shaking. She opened TikTok. Started a new draft. Filmed herself holding up a printed email—the one where the CEO promised “unlimited PTO” but then denied every request for six months. proxy tiktok
Jenna from accounting posted a video about wage theft. Proxy mirrored it into a “Teamwork Makes the Dream Work” slideshow for corporate. Marcus in IT posted a rant about mandatory RTO. Proxy turned it into a soothing ASMR video of typing sounds. Sarah had 300 followers
The reply came in three seconds. Live and shielded. You’re not alone. 2,341 other users across your company are doing the same thing right now. See you on the other side. Sarah closed her laptop. For the first time in two years, she smiled. She opened TikTok
Her real page, though—the one logged in on her own phone—still showed the breakroom clip. Still gaining views. Within a week, Proxy became an open secret. Everyone had a theory: it was a rogue AI, a fired engineer, a collective of students in Estonia. All anyone knew was the handle: . You sent them a DM. They cloned your account. You said what you wanted.
Before she could second-guess herself, she hit post. Then she DM’d Proxy: “New video. Protect it.”