OpenClaw is taking the tech world by storm. Here’s what you need to know about it.
If you’ve been tracking the latest AI news, you’ve likely heard of something called OpenClaw. Or maybe it was called Clawdbot or Moltbot. They’re all the same thing.
OpenClaw is an AI agent platform developed by Peter Steinberger in November 2025, designed to give AI models the ability to do things in the real world. Steinberger originally called it Clawdbot, a take on Anthropic’s own Claude AI model, but changed its name to Moltbot before ultimately landing on OpenClaw.
For a platform that’s just a few months old and has had three names, OpenClaw has quickly skyrocketed in popularity among AI boosters, developers, and enthusiasts.
In February, OpenAI (OPAI.PVT) snatched up Steinberger, hiring him to help develop the company’s personal agents. Nvidia (NVDA) had Steinberger on its GTC pre-show panel on March 16, and the popular lobster-claw logo is turning up as some not-so-stylish headgear fans wear at tech meetups around the world.
If you’re not up on the artificial intelligence race, though, everything you’ve just read might as well be in a different language. If you find yourself asking what the hype is all about, or what in the world I’m talking about, I’ve got you covered.
Let’s start with the basics. AI agents have been the hottest trend in artificial intelligence for a while now. But as a refresher, you can think of an agent as an AI bot that can perform actions on your behalf.
While chatbots like the initial version of OpenAI’s ChatGPT provided you with a more conversational version of a search engine, agents can do things like make changes within apps, grab data, rearrange it for you, browse the web, or make purchases.
But OpenClaw isn’t a new kind of AI model like ChatGPT or Anthropic’s (ANTH.PVT) Claude. Instead, it’s a platform that allows users to create AI agents that run on those models. The agents then communicate with ChatGPT or Anthropic to determine how to perform the actions you tell them to and complete them.
A man wears a lobster hat that represents the OpenClaw logo, an open-source AI assistant at the Baidu headquarters in Beijing on March 11, 2026. (ADEK BERRY / AFP via Getty Images) ·ADEK BERRY via Getty Images
“What ‘agent’ means in the AI and computer science world is a technology that can autonomously do things for a user, and typically … enact changes in the world,” Georgia Tech School of Interactive Computing professor Mark Riedl explained.
“So, if you think of a travel agent, [he or she is] not only someone who you can talk to but someone who also affects change in the world, meaning they can buy a ticket, they can put you on an airplane, they can reserve a hotel. The world is different because they did something on your behalf,” added Riedl, who also serves as the associate director of the Georgia Tech Machine Learning Center.
Because AI agents can perform tasks for users, companies have been careful with how much power they’re given. The last thing OpenAI, Anthropic, or Google (GOOG, GOOGL) wants is for an AI agent they’ve developed to, say, delete your data or buy 10,000 rolls of toilet paper on its own.
OpenClaw, however, can be configured to go a step further than others, giving AI agents complete access to a user’s computer. We’re talking about all of the files on there, from the most important to the most insignificant.
“It’s got some protections, but it’s sort of super easy to override all those protections. And of course, once you take down those protections, you can do a lot more. You can more easily connect things together, or more easily do more complicated things,” Riedl said.
You can choose to run OpenClaw in what’s called a sandbox to keep it from accessing too much of your system, but it’s not a perfect fix.
It’s not just that OpenClaw can control your computer, either. It can also be controlled remotely by linking it to apps like Telegram, Slack, and Discord, allowing you to message OpenClaw and give it commands on the go.
The upshot is that you can talk to OpenClaw, have it do things like triage your emails, update your calendar, find files on your computer, run services, open and run other apps, and more.
It can also be set up to perform actions at regular cadences using what are called “heartbeats.”
Heartbeats allow OpenClaw to do things at set times, like check your email or notifications when you get them.
“This is very similar to how you and I go about our daily agenda,” Ayham Boucher, head of AI Innovations for Cornell Information Technologies at the Ithaca campus and Information Technologies & Services at Weill Cornell Medicine, told Yahoo Finance.
“It has its tasks that you have set over time. For example … every day I want you to read the stock market or read the latest news. There are other triggers, like every time I receive an email, every time a new calendar invite comes.”
While turning your computer into a powerful AI assistant can be helpful, it also has its risks.
In February, a safety and alignment worker at Meta Superintelligence detailed in a post on X how OpenClaw began bulk-deleting her email even after she told it not to take any actions without her express permission.
During a conversation about Cisco’s new security tools designed to put guardrails around OpenClaw, president Jeetu Patel explained how AI agents will need more security and privacy capabilities before they go mainstream.
“These agents … they’re kind of like teenagers,” Patel said. “They’re supremely confident, they’re inexperienced, they don’t fully appreciate the consequences, and they have no idea where the rules exist.”
That’s part of the reason enterprises are holding off on deploying OpenClaw on their networks. But as the platform gains ever more attention, it could soon end up powering systems across a number of more tech-savvy organizations. Unless something bigger comes first.
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Email Daniel Howley at dhowley@yahoofinance.com. Follow him on Twitter at @DanielHowley.