OpenAI, On Steinberger
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You can start using the personal AI assistant right away, but you should understand the security risks first.
PicoClaw is an ultra-lightweight personal AI Assistant designed to work on less than 10 MB RAM and suitable for resource-constrained embedded boards such
Pansophy is a secure personal AI assistant that runs on your Mac (or other computer). Once installed, Pansophy acts like a constant companion that can help with writing, coding, research, planning and everyday problem-solving. You can ask it to draft ...
OpenClaw is billed as ‘the AI that actually does things’ and needs almost no input to potentially wreak havoc
The AI-based personal assistant Clawdbot has gone viral for its powerful features, but experts warn it raises serious security risks due to access to private data and personal accounts.
Welcome to OpenClaw. It's the same AI assistant as Clawdbot with a newer, sturdier shell. And boy, does this lobster have lore. Here's the OpenClaw pitch that had tech X (the platform formerly known as Twitter) losing its mind: Imagine an AI assistant that doesn't just chat; it does stuff. Real stuff. On your computer. Through the apps you use.
A software engineer has created ClawBands in GitHub to put human controls on the popular but risky OpenClaw AI agent. Meanwhile, OpenClaw developer Peter Steinberger is moving to OpenAI to continue his work on personal AI agents.
AI agents are a risky business. Even when stuck inside the chatbox window, LLMs will make mistakes and behave badly. Once they have tools that they can use to interact with the outside world, such as web browsers and email addresses, the consequences of those mistakes become far more serious.