Close Menu
Technophile NewsTechnophile News
  • Home
  • News
  • PC
  • Phones
  • Android
  • Gadgets
  • Games
  • Guides
  • Accessories
  • Reviews
  • Spotlight
  • More
    • Artificial Intelligence
    • Web Stories
    • Press Release
What's On
The ICE Expansion Won’t Happen in the Dark

The ICE Expansion Won’t Happen in the Dark

11 February 2026
Here are the 40 best Presidents Day deals you can already shop

Here are the 40 best Presidents Day deals you can already shop

11 February 2026
I Loved My OpenClaw AI Agent—Until It Turned on Me

I Loved My OpenClaw AI Agent—Until It Turned on Me

11 February 2026
Samsung’s offering up to 0 of trade-in credit toward its new phones

Samsung’s offering up to $900 of trade-in credit toward its new phones

11 February 2026
Jeffrey Epstein Advised an Elon Musk Associate on Taking Tesla Private

Jeffrey Epstein Advised an Elon Musk Associate on Taking Tesla Private

11 February 2026
Facebook X (Twitter) Instagram
  • Privacy
  • Terms
  • Advertise
  • Contact Us
Wednesday, February 11
Facebook X (Twitter) Instagram YouTube
Technophile NewsTechnophile News
Demo
  • Home
  • News
  • PC
  • Phones
  • Android
  • Gadgets
  • Games
  • Guides
  • Accessories
  • Reviews
  • Spotlight
  • More
    • Artificial Intelligence
    • Web Stories
    • Press Release
Technophile NewsTechnophile News
Home » I Loved My OpenClaw AI Agent—Until It Turned on Me
News

I Loved My OpenClaw AI Agent—Until It Turned on Me

By News Room11 February 20263 Mins Read
Facebook Twitter Pinterest LinkedIn Telegram Tumblr Reddit WhatsApp Email
I Loved My OpenClaw AI Agent—Until It Turned on Me
Share
Facebook Twitter LinkedIn Pinterest Email

OpenClaw, a powerful new agentic assistant, has a thing for guacamole.

This is one of several things I discovered while using the viral artificial intelligence bot as my personal assistant this past week.

Previously known as both Clawdbot and Moltbot, OpenClaw recently became a Silicon Valley darling, charming AI enthusiasts and investors eager to either embrace the bleeding edge or profit from it. The highly capable, web-savvy AI bot has even inspired its own AI-only (or mostly) social network.

As the writer of WIRED’s AI Lab newsletter, I figured I should take the plunge and try using OpenClaw myself. I had the bot monitor incoming emails and other messages, dig up interesting research, order groceries, and even negotiate deals on my behalf.

For brave (or perhaps reckless) early adopters, OpenClaw seems like a legitimate glimpse of the future. But any sense of wonder is accompanied by a dollop of terror as the AI agent romps through emails and file systems, wields a credit card, and occasionally even turns on its human user (although in my case, this about-face was entirely my fault).

How I Set It Up

OpenClaw is designed to live on a home computer that’s on all the time. I configured OpenClaw to run on a PC running Linux, to access Anthropic’s model Claude Opus, and to talk to me over Telegram.

Installing OpenClaw is simple, but configuring it and keeping it running can be a headache. You need to give the bot an AI backend by generating an API key for Claude, GPT, or Gemini, which you paste into the bot’s config files. To have OpenClaw use Telegram, I also had to first create a new Telegram bot, then give OpenClaw the bot’s credentials.

For OpenClaw to be truly useful, you need to connect it to other software tools. I created a Brave Browser Search API account to let OpenClaw search the web. I also configured it so that it could access the Chrome browser through an extension. And, God help me, I gave it access to email, Slack, and Discord servers.

Once all this was done, I could talk to OpenClaw from anywhere and tell it how to use my computer. At the outset, OpenClaw asked me some personal questions and let me select its personality. (The options reflect the project’s anarchic vibe; my bot, called Molty, likes to call itself a “chaos gremlin.”) The resulting persona feels very different from Siri or ChatGPT, and it’s one of the secrets to OpenClaw’s runaway popularity.

Web Research

One of the first things I asked Molty to do was send me a daily roundup of interesting AI and robotics research papers from the arXiv, a platform where researchers upload their work.

I had previously spent a couple afternoons vibe-coding websites (www.arxivslurper.com and www.robotalert.xyz) to search the arXiv. It was amazing (though a little demoralizing) to see OpenClaw instantly automate all of the same browsing and analysis work required. The papers it selects are so-so, but with further instruction I imagine it could get a lot better. This kind of web searching and monitoring is certainly helpful, and I imagine I’ll use OpenClaw for this a lot.

IT Support

OpenClaw also has an uncanny, almost spooky ability to fix technical issues on your machine.

This shouldn’t be surprising, given that it is designed to use a frontier model capable of writing and debugging code and using the command line with ease. Even so, it’s eerie when OpenClaw just reconfigures its own settings to load a new AI model or debugs a problem with the browser on the fly.

Share. Facebook Twitter Pinterest LinkedIn Tumblr Email

Related News

The ICE Expansion Won’t Happen in the Dark

The ICE Expansion Won’t Happen in the Dark

11 February 2026
Here are the 40 best Presidents Day deals you can already shop

Here are the 40 best Presidents Day deals you can already shop

11 February 2026
Samsung’s offering up to 0 of trade-in credit toward its new phones

Samsung’s offering up to $900 of trade-in credit toward its new phones

11 February 2026
Jeffrey Epstein Advised an Elon Musk Associate on Taking Tesla Private

Jeffrey Epstein Advised an Elon Musk Associate on Taking Tesla Private

11 February 2026
Microsoft fixes Notepad flaw that could trick users into clicking malicious Markdown links

Microsoft fixes Notepad flaw that could trick users into clicking malicious Markdown links

11 February 2026
CBP Signs Clearview AI Deal to Use Face Recognition for ‘Tactical Targeting’

CBP Signs Clearview AI Deal to Use Face Recognition for ‘Tactical Targeting’

11 February 2026
Top Articles
The CES 2026 stuff I might actually buy

The CES 2026 stuff I might actually buy

10 January 202660 Views
The Nex Playground and Pixel Buds 2A top our list of the best deals this week

The Nex Playground and Pixel Buds 2A top our list of the best deals this week

13 December 202549 Views
OpenAI Launches GPT-5.2 as It Navigates ‘Code Red’

OpenAI Launches GPT-5.2 as It Navigates ‘Code Red’

11 December 202545 Views
Stay In Touch
  • Facebook
  • YouTube
  • TikTok
  • WhatsApp
  • Twitter
  • Instagram
Don't Miss
Microsoft fixes Notepad flaw that could trick users into clicking malicious Markdown links

Microsoft fixes Notepad flaw that could trick users into clicking malicious Markdown links

11 February 2026

Microsoft has fixed a serious security vulnerability affecting Markdown files in Notepad. In the company’s…

CBP Signs Clearview AI Deal to Use Face Recognition for ‘Tactical Targeting’

CBP Signs Clearview AI Deal to Use Face Recognition for ‘Tactical Targeting’

11 February 2026
TikTok launches Local Feeds in the US

TikTok launches Local Feeds in the US

11 February 2026
Jessie Diggins’ Starter Pack: Winter Olympics 2026

Jessie Diggins’ Starter Pack: Winter Olympics 2026

11 February 2026
Technophile News
Facebook X (Twitter) Instagram Pinterest YouTube Dribbble
  • Privacy Policy
  • Terms of use
  • Advertise
  • Contact Us
© 2026 Technophile News. All Rights Reserved.

Type above and press Enter to search. Press Esc to cancel.