Local Governments Promote OpenClaw AI Despite Central Warnings

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.

The open-source AI agent OpenClaw continues to drive excitement across China, with major internet firms providing accessible versions. Local governments are actively promoting adoption through subsidies and tailored software development. A standout initiative comes from a district in Wuxi, Jiangsu province, which launched a 12-point plan including foundational support, talent recruitment, and security compliance measures, with grants up to 5 million yuan (US$728,000) per individual.

This local fervor follows swift central interventions, as previously reported, with the Ministry of Industry and Information Technology (MIIT) and National Computer Network Emergency Response Technical Team/Coordination Centre of China (CNCERT) flagging security vulnerabilities. The People's Bank of China (PBOC) has specifically addressed AI in finance, advocating a “proactive yet prudent, safe and orderly” deployment. Its 2026 agenda prioritizes risk mitigation, enhanced supervision, and high-quality development, while promoting banking-tech integration.

PBOC's stance echoes its ongoing policy of tech empowerment with safeguards, discussed in a recent meeting with department heads and deputy governor Zou Lan.

Experts like Alfred Wu from the Lee Kuan Yew School of Public Policy observe that local authorities' rush contrasts with central restraint, revealing persistent priority divergences between levels of government.

Articoli correlati

Chinese Premier Li Qiang delivering a speech at the Summer Davos forum about AI governance.
Immagine generata dall'IA

Chinese premier says China will continue participating in global AI governance

Riportato dall'IA Immagine generata dall'IA

Chinese Premier Li Qiang said on Wednesday at the Summer Davos forum in Dalian that China will continue to participate in global governance on artificial intelligence and other domains in a responsible and constructive manner.

Tencent’s cloud unit launched ClawPro in public beta on Thursday, an AI agent management platform for enterprises to deploy OpenClaw templates, select models and agents, track token consumption, and manage security. The company said firms can deploy it in just 10 minutes without specialised technical support.

Riportato dall'IA

Former OpenAI executive Zack Kass says Chinese enterprises lag behind US peers in AI adoption due to rigid corporate hierarchies, despite tech-savvy consumers. In a recent interview with the South China Morning Post, he described China as having a 'techno-centric consumer' and the US a 'techno-centric enterprise'. Kass said this cultural divergence explains the frenzy around OpenClaw in China, even as it struggles for scale in the US.

A recent podcast episode raised concerns that the UK government’s growing use of AI tools in public services—and potentially in elements of legislative work—could increase security and sovereignty risks tied to overseas providers.

Riportato dall'IA

Sulla scia del lancio da parte di Anthropic del suo potente modello di IA Claude Mythos, in grado di rilevare e sfruttare le vulnerabilità del software, il Segretario al Tesoro degli Stati Uniti ha convocato i vertici bancari per sottolineare la crescente minaccia di attacchi informatici guidati dall'intelligenza artificiale. L'iniziativa evidenzia le crescenti preoccupazioni, dato che l'accesso all'IA è limitato a una coalizione tecnologica tramite il Project Glasswing.

Questo sito web utilizza i cookie

Utilizziamo i cookie per l'analisi per migliorare il nostro sito. Leggi la nostra politica sulla privacy per ulteriori informazioni.
Rifiuta