Artificial Intelligence & Machine Learning
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Next-Generation Technologies & Secure Development
Steinberger to Lead AI Giant’s Multi-Agent Development Team

Peter Steinberger is joining OpenAI to lead development of personal agents, culminating weeks of viral attention paid to his OpenClaw open-source artificial intelligence assistant project.
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OpenAI chief executive Sam Altman said Steinberger will drive the next generation of personal agents at the company. “He is a genius with a lot of amazing ideas about the future of very smart agents interacting with each other to do very useful things for people. We expect this will quickly become core to our product offerings,” Altman posted on X, formerly Twitter.
The agreement caps a turbulent period for OpenClaw, which allows users to automate tasks through messaging apps by providing the bot with their service credentials. The bot, previously known as Clawdbot and Moltbot, can handle actions like replying to emails and other automations such as web shopping and managing calendars.
Security experts dubbed it a “dumpster fire” after hackers were quick to add malicious functions known as “skills” to the platform. Researchers spotted one skill that exfiltrated data by running a curl command to an external server without the user’s knowledge (see: OpenClaw AI Agent Sparks Global Security Alarm).
Consulting firm Gartner recommended businesses immediately block OpenClaw downloads and traffic and rotate any credentials OpenClaw has touched. The Chinese government similarly warned users but stopped short of an outright ban, reported Reuters.
Steinberger described a “whirlwind” month in a blog post asserting the internet “got weird again” and that “OpenAI was the best place to continue pushing on my vision and expand its reach.”
Steinberger said his next mission is to build an agent that even his mother could use, which will need broader changes, more thought on safety and access to the latest models and research. He acknowledged OpenClaw “could become a huge company,” but the prospect did not excite him. “What I want is to change the world, not build a large company and teaming up with OpenAI is the fastest way to bring this to everyone,” he said.
In a late January X post, he pushed back against criticism, writing “The amount of crap I get for putting out a hobby project for free is quite something.” Most “non-techies should not install this. It’s not finished, I know about the sharp edges,” he also wrote.
OpenClaw will transition to a foundation structure and be an open-source project that OpenAI will support, Altman said, adding that the future is going to be “extremely multi-agent” and it is important to OpenAI to support open source as part of that approach.
Neither OpenAI nor Steinberger disclosed financial terms of the arrangement or what consideration changed hands. Altman did not indicate when or how OpenAI will incorporate the technology into its services or whether it will retain the OpenClaw name for its own offerings.
