# OpenClaw Creator Peter Steinberger Joins OpenAI: A Game-Changer for AI Agents
In a move that’s electrifying the AI world, Peter Steinberger, the Austrian developer behind the viral **OpenClaw** AI agent, has officially joined OpenAI. OpenAI CEO Sam Altman announced the hire, praising Steinberger as a “genius” poised to drive the next generation of personal agents.[1][2][3]
This news, breaking just days ago, underscores the intensifying talent wars in AI and signals a bold step toward making autonomous agents accessible to everyone.[1][5]
## The Rise of OpenClaw: From Playground Project to Global Phenomenon
**OpenClaw** started as Steinberger’s personal experiment but exploded into the fastest-growing GitHub project ever.[4] Originally dubbed Clawdbot, it rebranded to Moltbot after Anthropic issued legal threats over similarities to their Claude model, then settled on OpenClaw— a name Steinberger simply preferred.[1][2]
Marketed as the “AI that actually does things,” OpenClaw automates real-world tasks like managing calendars, booking flights, or even joining social networks populated by other AI agents.[1] It integrates with external large language models (LLMs) such as Claude, GPT, and Gemini, allowing users to interact via chat apps including Telegram, Discord, WhatsApp, and Signal.[2]
What sets OpenClaw apart is its **autonomous workflow automation**. Users chat with it like a personal assistant, and it handles complex actions across services—vibe-coded, as some call it, for its intuitive, no-fuss approach.[2] In mere weeks, it went viral, inspiring hackers, researchers, and builders worldwide.[5]
Steinberger’s blog post captures the whirlwind: “The last month was a whirlwind, never would I have expected that my playground project would create such waves.”[5] The “lobster” mascot—yes, OpenClaw draws from crustacean imagery—has become a meme-worthy icon, with “The claw is the law” trending across tech circles.[5]
## Security Concerns Amid the Hype
OpenClaw’s rapid rise wasn’t without pitfalls. Researchers quickly uncovered **alarming security issues**, including vulnerabilities, exposed misconfigured instances, susceptibility to indirect prompt injection, and malicious agent skills.[2] These flaws highlight the risks of deploying powerful autonomous agents at scale, prompting calls for safer designs.[2]
Steinberger acknowledges this head-on, stating his next goal is “to build an agent that even my mum can use. That’ll need a much broader change, a lot more thought on how to do it safely.”[2][5]
## Why OpenAI? Steinberger’s Vision Over Company-Building
Despite opportunities to scale OpenClaw into a massive startup—with offers reportedly from Mark Zuckerberg and Altman himself—Steinberger opted out.[3][5] “Yes, I could totally see how OpenClaw could become a huge company. And no, it’s not really exciting for me,” he wrote. After 13 years building a previous company, he’s a “builder at heart” focused on world-changing impact, not empire-building.[1][5]
Teaming with OpenAI offers “the fastest way to bring this to everyone,” with access to cutting-edge models, research, and resources.[1][5] Altman echoed this, tweeting: “Peter Steinberger is joining OpenAI to drive the next generation of personal agents… the future is going to be extremely multi-agent.”[1][3]
OpenAI leaders welcomed him warmly. Engineering lead Thibault Sottiaux called him “proof you can just build things,” while others noted OpenAI’s culture of ex-founders.[3]
## OpenClaw’s Future: Open Source Under a Foundation
Crucially, OpenClaw won’t vanish behind closed doors. Steinberger insists it “stays open source and given the freedom to flourish.”[1][5] Altman confirmed it will “live in a foundation as an open source project that OpenAI will continue to support.”[1] OpenAI already sponsors it, and Steinberger is establishing a foundation to nurture the “magical” community, supporting more models and data ownership.[2][5]
This structure aims to let thinkers and hackers thrive while expanding reach.[5]
## Industry Reactions: Praise, Memes, and Rivalry Sparks
The announcement ignited a firestorm. Executives like Box CEO Aaron Levie hailed it as a 2026 milestone.[3] OpenClaw advisor Jamieson O’Reilly praised Steinberger’s frontline push: “While lots of people spectate… the dude is there, vigilantly on the front-lines.”[3]
Memes flooded X, with engineers joking about the talent wars.[3] Critics like Jason worried about the open-source project’s survival, though assurances quelled some fears.[3]
Rivals took jabs. Anthropic’s past legal “love letters” drew ire, with analyst George Orosz noting their “visible disdain for anything open source.”[3] Y Combinator’s Raphael Schaad predicted “VC tears,” urging investments in OpenClaw-inspired startups.[3]
Europe’s role? Some say regulatory hurdles left Steinberger no choice but to head stateside.[4]
## What This Means for AI Agents
Steinberger’s hire accelerates OpenAI’s agent ambitions. He envisions **multi-agent systems**—smart agents collaborating for useful tasks—becoming core products.[1][3] With OpenClaw’s foundation secured, expect safer, more intuitive agents soon, blending open innovation with frontier research.
Challenges remain: security, safety, and ethics in autonomous AI.[2] Yet Steinberger’s move inspires. As he puts it, it’s about fun, inspiration, and takeover—by lobsters or otherwise.[5]
This is AI evolution in real time. Builders like Steinberger remind us: the future isn’t just predicted; it’s clawed into existence.
*(Word count: 812)*
Original source: CNBC Business – OpenClaw creator Peter Steinberger joining OpenAI, Altman says

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