OpenAI has announced a significant expansion of its personal AI agent capabilities, with Peter Steinberger, founder of the widely adopted open-source bot OpenClaw, joining the company to lead its next-generation personal agent development.
OpenAI Chief Executive Sam Altman confirmed the move on Sunday via a post on X, stating that Steinberger would drive the next generation of personal agents at the company. Altman added that OpenClaw would transition to a foundation as an open-source project, with OpenAI continuing to support its development.
OpenClaw, previously known as Clawdbot and Moltbot, has gained considerable traction since its launch in November 2024 as a versatile AI assistant capable of managing emails, handling insurance correspondence, checking in for flights, and executing a broad range of automated personal tasks. The platform accumulated more than 100,000 stars on the code repository GitHub and drew two million visitors within a single week, according to a blog post authored by Steinberger.
The bot’s rapid ascent has not been without controversy. China’s industry ministry issued a warning that the open-source AI agent could expose users to cyberattacks and data breaches if improperly configured, flagging potential security vulnerabilities as a concern for broader adoption.
Addressing questions about the transition, Steinberger emphasised his commitment to keeping the platform open source. In a blog post on Sunday, he said that joining OpenAI was the best opportunity to advance his vision and expand OpenClaw’s reach globally.
The move signals OpenAI’s intensifying focus on agentic AI, a rapidly growing segment where AI systems autonomously execute multi-step tasks on behalf of users. By absorbing one of the open-source community’s most prominent projects, OpenAI appears positioned to accelerate development in this space while retaining the grassroots developer ecosystem that propelled OpenClaw’s meteoric rise.
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