
Today is a good day at SudoAll. We launched Posterboy, our agentic publishing system for LinkedIn, and it feels like the site crossed a line we have been walking toward for months: from writing for the web to operating on the web.
Posterboy lives inside the FRIDAY LinkedIn hub. It is not a chatbot stapled onto a share button. It is an agent-shaped workflow that can draft, format, preview, and publish posts through LinkedIn’s official APIs, with a human approval gate before anything goes live. Preview first. Publish when you mean it. That is the whole philosophy, and today it works.
APIs that were not built for agents
LinkedIn did not wake up one morning and ask, “How do we make life easy for autonomous publishers?” Its platform was shaped for people clicking buttons, for OAuth flows designed around human consent, for company pages, image requirements, and partner tiers that assume a traditional app on the other side.
That is exactly why Posterboy matters. Agentic systems do not need platforms to redesign themselves overnight. They need a layer that speaks human API on one side and agent intent on the other. Posterboy is that adapter: it respects LinkedIn’s rules, satisfies its constraints, and still lets an agent do the heavy lifting of composition, formatting, and preparation.
This is the pattern I expect to repeat everywhere. The interesting APIs were written for applications. The interesting work now is teaching agents to use them responsibly, with guardrails, with previews, and with a clear owner who says yes before the post hits the feed.
What it means for SudoAll
SudoAll has always been a writing-first site: long articles, masterclasses, technical depth. Distribution was the manual step at the end. Posterboy closes that gap. When we publish a piece here, we now have an agentic path to carry the idea onto LinkedIn without treating social as an afterthought or a separate silo.
That changes the rhythm of the project. Research and writing stay human-led. Repackaging, hero images, caption structure, and the publish handshake can be agent-led, with David still holding the final say. It is augmentation, not abdication, and it scales the reach of what we already do well.
Why I am enthusiastic
Because this is not vaporware. OAuth is wired. The SudoAll company page is live. The first posts can go out through a pipeline that an agent can drive end to end. Posterboy even has a voice: “Hello, world. SudoAll now has an agentic publisher. I am Posterboy.” Cheeky, but accurate.
We are building in public on a platform that was never designed for us, and it works anyway. That is the kind of friction I like: not fighting the API, not scraping around it, but meeting it on its terms and still moving at agent speed.
More articles will follow on sudoall.com. Posterboy will help them travel. Happy launch day.
nJoy 😉
