Key Takeaways
- Austrian developer Peter Steinberger’s OpenClaw AI agent has achieved remarkable popularity in China, with adoption rates exceeding those in the United States.
- Major Chinese technology companies Baidu and Tencent are organizing public workshops to assist everyday citizens in deploying the software.
- The Chinese community has embraced the tool with the nickname “raising a lobster,” applying it to solo entrepreneurship, stock selection, and workflow automation.
- Regional governments are providing financial support up to 20 million yuan ($2.8 million) annually for eligible “one-person companies” powered by AI.
- Financial institutions, educational organizations, government departments, and Chinese regulatory bodies are issuing cautions about data security vulnerabilities.
Peter Steinberger, an Austrian software developer, created OpenClaw as an open-source AI agent capable of remarkable autonomy. This technology can operate computers independently, navigate websites, purchase airline tickets, and coordinate with additional bots—all functioning without direct human intervention.
China’s enthusiasm for artificial intelligence reached unprecedented levels this year as OpenClaw captured widespread attention.
Nvidia CEO Jensen Huang described it as “the next ChatGPT.” For Chinese users, the tool has evolved into a cultural phenomenon.
The Chinese public has affectionately dubbed the software “lobster,” transforming its installation process into a community experience. Technology leaders Baidu and Tencent have organized large-scale gatherings where hundreds of participants queue to receive assistance setting up the application on their devices.
“Everyone in my circle—coworkers and friends alike—has installed it,” explained Gong Sheng, a recent adopter who participated in a Baidu workshop in Beijing. “I want to stay current with this technology.”
Following its debut in November 2025, OpenClaw achieved recognition as among the most rapidly adopted projects in GitHub’s history, the platform that serves as the primary hub for developers worldwide.
Research conducted by US cybersecurity company SecurityScorecard reveals that Chinese adoption of OpenClaw has now exceeded American usage rates.
Practical Applications Emerging Across China
Chinese users have discovered diverse applications for this autonomous agent. A growing number are launching what the community calls “one-person companies”—entrepreneurial ventures managed almost exclusively through AI assistance.
“Traditional employees require breaks and time off, while OpenClaw operates continuously around the clock,” explained Wang Xiaoyan, who is building her enterprise using the agent.
Additional users are deploying the technology for investment analysis, lottery number selection, online retail store management, and developing revenue-generating applications.
Government support for this trend has been substantial. Multiple regional authorities are allocating subsidies reaching 20 million yuan annually to qualifying AI-driven solo business operations.
Retired professionals and university students have flocked to training sessions, seeking opportunities for supplementary income. During a workshop conducted by AI startup Zhipu in Beijing, Fan Xinquan, aged 60, shared that he was training an agent to systematically organize his professional expertise more effectively than conversational AI platforms like DeepSeek.
This momentum supports China’s broader AI Plus national strategy, designed to integrate artificial intelligence throughout every sector of the economy.
Regulatory Concerns and Escalating Expenses
The enthusiasm has met with significant reservations. Chinese regulatory authorities have intensified their warnings regarding data protection and security vulnerabilities associated with OpenClaw.
Government departments, financial institutions, investment firms, and academic institutions have prohibited staff members from installing the application. China’s state-run People’s Daily published editorial commentary calling on authorities to “firmly maintain the safety bottom line.”
Concerns have emerged from the user base as well. “Average people like us struggle to understand exactly what permissions we’ve granted and what information it has accessed,” said user Gong Zheng.
Practical challenges have also surfaced. AI startup Zhipu implemented a 20% price increase this week for tokens used with its OpenClaw-compatible model.
A post on Chinese social platform Rednote, headlined “Goodbye OpenClaw,” chronicled how regular users invested substantial sums purchasing tokens, ultimately receiving “a pile of useless data” in return.
During a recent Baidu demonstration, an OpenClaw agent responded to a voice instruction to place a coffee order through a McDonald’s application connected to a smart device. The transaction required nearly two minutes to complete—illustrating the distance between the technology’s potential and its present real-world capabilities.

