Inside OpenClaw mania in China, as security fears surge alongside enthusiasm for AI agent



By the time software programmer Guo Cancan realised something had gone horribly wrong with OpenClaw – the task-executing AI agent that has ignited a fervour across China – the damage was already done.

While on holiday over the Chinese New Year, Guo was tinkering with the autonomous open-source program. When he attempted to resolve an error that it had made, OpenClaw responded by deleting nearly everything on his computer’s D: drive – a major storage partition – wiping out years of personal data and photographs.

The mishap caught Guo, a smart-security professional in the tech hub of Hangzhou, completely off guard.

“I followed an online tutorial to install the agent for automating my social media postings … and was unaware of the security risks at the beginning,” Guo said on Tuesday.

Guo’s data loss is one of many incidents being shared by OpenClaw users amid a nationwide rush to adopt the agent, with the craze dubbed “raising a lobster”, in reference to the program’s prominent crustacean mascot.

The mishaps offer a glimpse of the problems that can arise when new and unpredictable technology rapidly surges in popularity.

  • Related Posts

    CATL falls nearly 7% on US$5 billion private placement to expand renewables

    Shares of Contemporary Amperex Technology Ltd (CATL), the world’s largest manufacturer of batteries for electric vehicles and energy storage, fell on Tuesday following the announcement of a plan to raise…

    Continue reading
    Lightelligence jumps in Hong Kong debut amid AI-driven demand for photonics chips

    Lightelligence, the first mainland Chinese photonics chipmaker to go public in Hong Kong, saw its share price surge by nearly 400 per cent in its trading debut on Tuesday, as…

    Continue reading

    Leave a Reply

    Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *