Crowds in China queue for OpenClaw AI agent installs

This month in China, people have queued on streets to install the AI agent OpenClaw on their computers. Some travelled from other cities, others waited hours for engineers to set it up, and 'birth certificates' were issued upon installation. The frenzy highlights enthusiasm for AI agents.

Amid recent government warnings about security risks, people have lined up on streets in China this month to install OpenClaw, an AI agent that goes beyond conversational tools by autonomously executing tasks. With user permissions, it can browse the internet, organise files, send emails, analyse data, or run code—like a tireless digital employee.

Some travelled from other cities and waited hours for engineers to complete setups, receiving 'birth certificates' upon installation. The quirky scenes signal a pivotal moment in the global AI race, showcasing technological enthusiasm alongside corporate strategies and the risks of digital gold rushes.

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Dramatic illustration of a computer screen showing OpenClaw AI security warning from Chinese cybersecurity agency, with hacker threats and vulnerability symbols.
Larawang ginawa ng AI

Chinese cybersecurity agency warns of OpenClaw AI risks

Iniulat ng AI Larawang ginawa ng AI

China's national cybersecurity authority has warned of security risks in the OpenClaw AI agent software, which could allow attackers to gain full control of users' computer systems. The software has seen rapid growth in downloads and usage, with major domestic cloud platforms offering one-click deployment services, but its default security configuration is weak.

Following initial alerts from cybersecurity agencies, the Chinese government has warned offices of ongoing security risks from OpenClaw AI, as its use proliferates in government agencies and workplaces despite crackdowns.

Iniulat ng AI

As cybersecurity agencies warned of risks in the popular open-source AI agent OpenClaw (see prior coverage), China's local governments are pushing ahead with subsidies and development plans, exemplified by Wuxi's comprehensive support program. Central authorities, including the People's Bank of China, urge caution, underscoring tensions between local enthusiasm and national security priorities.

Windscribe has added native support for OpenClaw agentic AI in its VPN software, allowing autonomous AI agents to control VPN settings. The integration aims to separate AI-generated traffic from users' personal web activity, protecting home networks from potential issues. Company representatives described it as addressing a key privacy gap for AI users.

Iniulat ng AI

A 24-year-old engineer at Shanghai Artificial Intelligence Laboratory has launched Colleague Skill, an AI tool claiming to extract downloadable skills from colleagues and figures like Steve Jobs and Gautama Buddha. Developed in under four hours, the project went viral on Microsoft-backed GitHub amid fears of AI displacing jobs in China. Zhou Tianyi told The Paper the tool turns work communications and documents into reusable skills to prevent repetitive labor.

Identity startup World has released a beta version of Agent Kit, allowing users to link their iris-scan verified World ID to AI agents. The tool aims to help websites distinguish requests from human-directed agents amid rising concerns over AI agent swarms. It builds on iris-scanning technology originally tied to the Worldcoin cryptocurrency.

Iniulat ng AI

Google has introduced a new command-line interface tool for its Workspace suite, aimed at simplifying integration with AI systems like OpenClaw. The tool bundles APIs from products such as Gmail, Drive, and Calendar, though it is not an officially supported product. This release emphasizes ease of use for both human developers and AI agents.

 

 

 

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