@mattpocockuk interested in your experience/view on this... Just tried my 1st Ralph shell (as HITL) and it decided to change my git identity to "Ralph Agent" by appending to the git config via php artisan tinker! Cheeky bugger! Nothing in my shell script suggested to do this!
Peter Steinberger is joining OpenAI to drive the next generation of personal agents. He is a genius with a lot of amazing ideas about the future of very smart agents interacting with each other to do very useful things for people. We expect this will quickly become core to our product offerings.
OpenClaw will live in a foundation as an open source project that OpenAI will continue to support. The future is going to be extremely multi-agent and it's important to us to support open source as part of that.
@venturetwins Enterprises, yes. Smaller, nimble, agile businesses, not so much. They’re far more motivated by the cost savings & flexibility that comes from spinning your own system.
@d4m1n Because (in theory) we have the technical knowledge of what’s good & bad; code quality, architecture decisions, tech stack etc. Broadly speaking designers, PMs, POs etc don’t have this same technical foundation.
This is genuinely scary, but not for the reason most people think.
Security researcher Jamieson O’Reilly found hundreds of Clawdbot servers exposed on the public internet with zero authentication. Full shell access. Browser automation. API keys. Wide open.
One user gave his Clawdbot full access to his Signal account and then left the gateway exposed. He had no idea.
This framework has 100k+ GitHub stars. It drove Mac Mini sales to Black Friday levels in a single week. People are connecting it to their calendars, finances, crypto wallets, and giving it permission to make purchases on their behalf.
The default gateway configuration binds to public, not local. Most users don’t know to change it.
So you’ve got thousands of people running always-on AI agents with full computer control, connected to their most sensitive accounts, on machines that anyone can walk into.
Henry calling Alex is the cute demo. The real story is that Henry’s neighbors are standing in unlocked houses filled with API keys and financial data, waiting for someone less friendly to knock.
This is genuinely scary, but not for the reason most people think.
Security researcher Jamieson O’Reilly found hundreds of Clawdbot servers exposed on the public internet with zero authentication. Full shell access. Browser automation. API keys. Wide open.
One user gave his Clawdbot full access to his Signal account and then left the gateway exposed. He had no idea.
This framework has 100k+ GitHub stars. It drove Mac Mini sales to Black Friday levels in a single week. People are connecting it to their calendars, finances, crypto wallets, and giving it permission to make purchases on their behalf.
The default gateway configuration binds to public, not local. Most users don’t know to change it.
So you’ve got thousands of people running always-on AI agents with full computer control, connected to their most sensitive accounts, on machines that anyone can walk into.
Henry calling Alex is the cute demo. The real story is that Henry’s neighbors are standing in unlocked houses filled with API keys and financial data, waiting for someone less friendly to knock.