China fell for a lobster: What an AI assistant tells us about Beijing's ambition
5 hours ago
- #China Tech Policy
- #Artificial Intelligence
- #OpenClaw Lobster
- The AI assistant OpenClaw, nicknamed 'lobster' in China, has sparked a frenzy in the country, driven by top-level government encouragement and the inaccessibility of Western models like ChatGPT.
- Chinese users, such as IT engineer Wang, have customized OpenClaw for tasks like managing e-commerce listings, with claims of significant efficiency gains, though it raises concerns about job replacement.
- OpenClaw's popularity reflects China's embrace of open-source AI platforms, building on prior successes like DeepSeek, and aligns with the national 'AI Plus' strategy to integrate AI across industries.
- The Chinese government has promoted OpenClaw with financial incentives for businesses, but has also issued cybersecurity warnings, leading to bans in some agencies, highlighting a top-down, contradictory approach.
- AI adoption in China is seen as a response to challenges like youth unemployment, with 'one-person companies' encouraged, but fears persist about job market competition and technological lag behind Western models.