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.

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