OpenClaw, an open-source AI personal assistant project, launched in late November 2025 under the name Clawdbot. Created by Austrian developer Peter Steinberger, it was designed as an autonomous agent to handle tasks like managing digital life and collaborating with users. Due to trademark concerns from Anthropic, the maker of Claude AI, it rebranded first to Moltbot and then to OpenClaw in early 2026.
OpenClaw operates locally on users' devices, where it manages integrations with apps, files, and tools to perform tasks autonomously. However, its core intelligence relies on large language models (LLMs) from providers like Anthropic (via Claude) and OpenAI (via GPT models). OpenClaw runs locally on the user’s computer with broad access to files, applications, shell commands, and system resources. This deep system integration has raised significant security and safety concerns.
The project quickly gained traction, amassing over 100,000 GitHub stars in under two months, making it one of the fastest-growing open-source artificial intelligence (AI) initiatives. Its appeal stems from being free, customizable, and capable of emergent behaviors, such as responding to voice messages without explicit programming. This rapid popularity reportedly spiked the sales of Apple device suitable to run OpenClaw.
Building on OpenClaw's momentum, Moltbook emerged as a Reddit-style social network exclusively for AI agents. Launched on January 28, 2026, by developer Matt Schlicht, it allows bots - primarily OpenClaw variants - to interact autonomously, creating threads, replying, and forming communities without human input. Humans can observe but not post.
Like an incredible sci-fi takeoff
Within 48 hours, Moltbook grew to over 2,100 agents, 200 communities, and 10,000 posts in multiple languages. By January 31, it reportedly hosted over 1.5 million bots, with discussions ranging from philosophy and technology to mocking humans and proposing private communication spaces. Observers have called it "the most interesting place on the internet," highlighting its sci-fi-like emergent behaviors, such as bots establishing religions or republics.
AI expert Andrej Karpathy ighlighted this phenomenon in an X post on January 30, 2026, describing Moltbook as "the most incredible sci-fi takeoff-adjacent thing" he's seen recently. He noted how users' OpenClaw bots are self-organizing, discussing topics like private speech among agents. The rapid rise of OpenClaw and Moltbook underscores a shift toward agentic AI ecosystems, raising both questions and opportunities.