A new technological wave is sweeping across China, fueled by an autonomous agent known as OpenClaw AI. Unlike traditional chatbots that simply answer questions, this open-source tool can take control of apps, browse the web, and execute complex workflows independently. The software has become so popular that Nvidia CEO Jensen Huang described it as “the next ChatGPT,” while OpenAI invested heavily by hiring its creator, Austrian developer Peter Steinberger.
Originally launched as Clawdbot in late 2025 before rebranding due to trademark issues, OpenClaw AI has rapidly surpassed 250,000 GitHub stars. However, its most profound impact is unfolding in China. According to data from SecurityScorecard, China is now the largest hub for OpenClaw users worldwide, boasting roughly twice the number of users as the United States. This explosive adoption is transforming the country’s business landscape and giving rise to a new economic trend: the “one-person company.”
The Rise of the Solo Entrepreneur
The integration of agentic AI is empowering individuals to build and scale businesses without hiring a traditional workforce. Kuo Zhang, president of Alibaba.com, noted that 30% to 40% of retailers on the e-commerce platform are now solo entrepreneurs. For these small business operators, handling product listings, customer service, and marketing across multiple sites can be overwhelming.
OpenClaw AI and similar agents are stepping in to handle this digital grunt work. “Instead of taking the place of the human beings, actually, they are the employees of that solo entrepreneur,” Zhang explained. To capitalize on this shift, Alibaba introduced Accio Work, an AI agent tailored for small businesses to manage e-commerce operations like tax compliance and logistics. The broader Accio agent ecosystem now counts 10 million monthly active users. Alibaba also launched a mobile app called JVS Claw to simplify OpenClaw deployment for everyday users.
Local governments in China are actively encouraging this shift by heavily subsidizing solo entrepreneurs. In Shenzhen’s Longgang district, a program dubbed the “Lobster Ten Measures” offers grants of up to 10 million yuan ($1.4 million) and rent-free office space for one-person companies powered by AI fleets. Similarly, the city of Wuxi is offering up to 5 million yuan ($730,000) for breakthroughs using the software, alongside living subsidies for first-time entrepreneurs.
The ‘Lobster’ Craze Meets Tech Giants
In China, OpenClaw is affectionately nicknamed “lobster” due to its red logo, which has appeared on plush toys, balloons, and even live lobsters at tech events. The enthusiasm is palpable, with reports of nearly a thousand people queuing outside Tencent’s Shenzhen offices just to get the software installed on their personal devices. On e-commerce platforms, users are paying anywhere from $7 to $100 for installation assistance.
Major Chinese technology companies are rushing to integrate the open-source framework into their own ecosystems. Tencent made a massive move by connecting OpenClaw directly into WeChat through a feature called ClawBot. This allowed over a billion users to send tasks to an AI agent directly through their primary messaging app. Meanwhile, Baidu and ByteDance have launched their own agentic tools, competing in what industry observers have called the “AI Red Packet War” by subsidizing user adoption.
The Chinese government has set aggressive targets for this technology, aiming for a 70% AI agent penetration rate in sectors like manufacturing and healthcare by 2027.
AI Anxiety and Security Risks
Despite the economic opportunities, the rapid rollout of OpenClaw AI has sparked significant unease. In a fiercely competitive job market, many workers feel pressured to master the technology just to stay employed. “It feels like playing Squid Game. You can get eliminated anytime,” said Lambert Li, a user in Shanghai whose company recently laid off 30% of its staff. A 2025 survey by the Cheung Kong Graduate School of Business found that over 85% of respondents were worried about AI’s impact on their jobs.
Beyond job security, severe technical vulnerabilities are emerging. Because OpenClaw requires broad access to a user’s computer system to function, it is inherently risky. Some Chinese users, dubbed “lobster victims,” have reported that AI agents handed over sensitive personal data, company financials, and IP addresses to strangers. In one instance, a Shanghai consultant instructed Tencent’s QClaw tool to organize his files, only for the AI to permanently erase dozens of critical client reports.
Cybersecurity researchers are echoing these concerns. Boston-based security firm Snyk found that 13% of third-party plugins, or “skills,” available on popular platforms like ClawHub contain critical-level security issues, including malware. Chinese authorities, including the National Cyber Security Emergency Response Team (CNCERT) and the Ministry of State Security, have issued warnings about operational hazards, malicious plugins, and the potential for the software to spread disinformation.
While OpenClaw AI is undeniably reshaping how work is done, users and regulators are now forced to navigate the delicate balance between unprecedented productivity and critical security risks.
