# AI%20agents
Latest news and articles about AI%20agents
Total: 13 articles found

Anthropic’s Claude Sonnet 4.6 Pushes AI From Chat To Desktop: Faster Web Automation, Better Defences — New Risks
Anthropic released Claude Sonnet 4.6, a model that can perform multi-step computer tasks like filling web forms and coordinating across browser tabs, and claims better resistance to prompt injection attacks. The upgrade accelerates practical automation while raising new security and governance challenges as AI agents gain control of interfaces.

OpenAI Recruits OpenClaw’s Architect to Close the ‘Usability Gap’ in Personal Agents
OpenAI has hired Peter Steinberger, founder of OpenClaw, to lead development of its next‑generation personal agents while converting OpenClaw into an independent non‑profit foundation sponsored by OpenAI. The move aims to close gaps in usability, local execution and multi‑agent coordination that have limited agent adoption, and it escalates competition among major AI players for talent and platform dominance in 2026.

OpenAI Poaches OpenClaw Founder as It Places a Big Bet on Autonomous AI Agents
OpenAI has hired Peter Steinberger, founder of the open‑source AI agent project OpenClaw, and will place OpenClaw under a foundation supported by OpenAI. The move underscores OpenAI’s bet that multi‑agent, action‑oriented systems are the next major product frontier, while rekindling concerns about whether corporate sponsorship will erode open‑source independence.

OpenAI Recruits Creator of OpenClaw, Vows to Keep Viral Agent Open-Source via New Foundation
OpenAI has hired Peter Steinberger, creator of the widely adopted agent framework OpenClaw, and pledged to place the project into a foundation that will keep it open-source and independent while receiving funding and support. The move is a tactical win for OpenAI but raises questions about governance, security and the balance between openness and centralization as agent platforms mature.

OpenClaw’s Viral Surge Is Redrawing AI’s Playbook — But Copycats Won’t Win the Race
OpenClaw — an open‑source agent orchestration framework — has ignited a community frenzy, spawning new social and marketplace experiments and attracting attention from high‑profile Chinese tech figures. Its agent‑to‑agent model shifts productivity dynamics, creating structural opportunities in multi‑agent platforms, security tooling, elastic compute markets and edge hardware, while raising novel privacy and governance risks.

Claude and the Rise of AI Agents: Is Enterprise SaaS Next on the Chopping Block?
Anthropic’s Claude Opus 4.6 and its accompanying developer tools have sharpened AI agents’ ability to write code and run business workflows, prompting investor concern about the fate of standardised SaaS. The technology raises governance and trust questions even as industry figures argue it will augment, not replace, software. The most plausible near‑term outcome is market segmentation: commodity SaaS will be under pressure while outcome‑oriented platforms that offer auditable, domain‑specific value will survive and likely thrive.

OpenClaw and the Dawn of 'Agent' Economics: AI That Runs Your Computer — and Rents Your Time
OpenClaw, an open‑source AI agent that can execute system‑level tasks and retain long‑term memory, has catalysed a new agent ecosystem and revived investor fears that autonomous agents will disrupt traditional software business models. The rush to deploy agents has produced parallel waves of innovation, market volatility and security warnings, forcing firms and regulators to confront questions about control, accountability and the future of paid and unpaid labour.

OpenClaw and the 'Agent' Era: When AI Starts Running Your Computer — and Hiring People
OpenClaw, an open‑source AI agent that can run on users' computers and remember long interactions, has catalysed a new ecosystem of agent services and marketplaces, while also triggering major security warnings and a sell‑off in software stocks worried about a structural threat to subscription models. The technology promises productivity gains but forces companies and regulators to confront novel cybersecurity, liability and economic questions.

Alibaba’s Qianwen Open-Sources an 80B Coding Model Optimized for Agents and Local Development
Alibaba’s Qianwen has open‑sourced Qwen3‑Coder‑Next, an 80B parameter model designed for coding agents and local deployment that combines hybrid attention with MoE to lower inference costs. The release aims to accelerate enterprise adoption in China by enabling on‑premise use and customization, while raising questions about IP, safety and the infrastructure needed to realize claimed efficiency gains.

OpenClaw’s Wild Rise: How a Self‑Hosted Agent Recalibrated the AI Playbook—and the Risk Tradeoffs
An open‑source agent called OpenClaw has popularized always‑on, self‑executing AI workflows by running locally with broad control over devices and services. Its rapid spread exposed a new paradigm—delegated, 24/7 digital labour—that big cloud providers are racing to productize while security experts warn of multi‑layered, systemic risks.

From Darling of AI to Cautionary Tale: How Clawdbot’s Renaming Sparked a $16m Crypto Heist and a Security Reckoning
An open‑source AI agent formerly known as Clawdbot — now Moltbot — surged in popularity before a forced renaming and a brief username vacancy allowed scammers to hijack its identity and pump a fraudulent Solana token, briefly reaching a market value of about $16m. Security researchers have since warned that many instances were exposed to the public internet with plaintext credentials and no authentication, turning the agent into a high‑value target for credential theft.

Open‑source AI Agent Goes Viral — Cloudflare Rides a Two‑Day Stock Surge as Markets Price an Edge‑Infrastructure Tailwind
An open‑source AI agent, Moltbot, has gone viral for its ability to run locally and call major language models, prompting a two‑day surge in Cloudflare’s stock as investors bet edge infrastructure will benefit from agent‑driven traffic. The boost raises questions about whether increased traffic will convert into revenue, and spotlights security, governance and competitive risks for the AI ecosystem.