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I’m a Chinese product manager who created 6 AI employees on OpenClaw. I’m working more than ever and am way more tired.

This as-told-to essay is based on a conversation with Vivi Mengjie Xiao, an AI product manager and content creator on RedNote, China’s social media platform. The conversation has been edited for length and clarity.

I’m an AI product manager in China, and earlier this year, my CEO asked me to explore how AI could go beyond cost-cutting, to drive innovation.

Outside of work, I’m a content creator on RedNote, where I share AI tools, workflows, and insights with over 45,000 followers.

I used to spend about four hours a day gathering AI industry news: reading posts on X, newsletters, blog posts, and translating English sources into Chinese. I thought: “Can I automate this?” If AI can handle information gathering, what else can it do? If I’m doing something repetitive, I should automate it.

Each agent was born from a real problem I was experiencing. I created six AI employees, and they’re split between work and personal life.

My foray into OpenClaw

At first, I set up only one “lobster” — a nickname Chinese netizens use for deploying an OpenClaw agent — and tried to make it do everything.

I wanted it to manage my calendar, schedule, to-do list, and monitor my work. I get distracted easily, so I wanted it to help me focus on what I needed to do in the moment and help connect the main thread of my work.

I kept stuffing other tasks into it as well, such as assigning it to manage my finances.

The result of putting all of that on one lobster was that its context became long and messy. It basically became ADHD like me: jumping from one thing to another without helping me focus. It was running three work streams at once. That wasn’t going to work, so I split tasks up and assigned them to different lobsters.

Over time, the six AI employees naturally organized into personal vs. work, and within each category, into clear roles.

I have three work agents: the administrative assistant, the researcher, and the chief of staff. The chief of staff simulates my boss’s communication style, and I use it to practice and polish presentations. For personal agents, I have a life coach, a content and expression assistant, and a finance assistant.

It felt like building a real team. It makes sense — you don’t hire six people on day one. You start with one, and as the workload grows, you specialize.

The compound effect of having them connected surprised me. The life coach can read conversations from all five other agents. I use the life coach agent to help me journal daily, and now 70% of my journaling is automated. The agent knows everything — what I researched, what I invested in, and what I stressed about in my presentation rehearsal.

I’m more productive, but also more tired

About 60% to 70% of my daily operational work is handled by these AI agents, including information gathering, research, and content distribution.

However, my workday hasn’t gotten shorter. I’ve shifted from doing “grunt work” to doing more creative, strategic, and high-leverage work. The AI employees freed up capacity for significantly more output.

I’m more productive by any conventional metric. I publish podcast episodes daily, monitor financials in real time, run a knowledge management system, and create content for RedNote and X — all while working full-time.

Honestly, I’m also more tired. This is a paradox I’ve been thinking about: When your efficiency goes up, you don’t work less. You just attempt more.

My bedtime has shifted from midnight to 2 a.m. because there’s always one more thing I want to do, or one more agent I could spin up to solve a new problem.

The future of work

We’re witnessing a fundamental shift in what “work” means.

The Industrial Revolution standardized physical labor. The information revolution standardized knowledge work. And now, AI is standardizing execution work — the “how” of getting things done.

This means the premium is shifting from execution ability to three things: taste and judgment, ability to direct AI, and emotional intelligence.

The future of work is “one-person studios,” solo creators and operators who leverage AI to produce at team-level scale. For companies, the question becomes: do you need 10 junior analysts, or one senior thinker with 10 AI agents?

This isn’t about replacing humans. It’s about liberating humans to do more human work. The parts AI takes away were never the parts that made work meaningful. The parts that remain — creativity, judgment, connection, purpose — are what make us human.

Building a team of six AI agents feels like going from being a solo freelancer to being the CEO of a small company, except your team never sleeps, never complains, and works for the cost of API subscriptions.

I’ve become a more structured thinker, a clearer communicator, and a more ambitious creator. I now think in terms of “which agent should handle this?” for almost every task. AI expanded my sense of what’s possible for one person to build.

Do you have a story to share about tech in China? Contact this reporter at cmlee@businessinsider.com.




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OpenClaw creator says Europe’s stifling regulations are why he’s moving to the US to join OpenAI

In Europe, there’s been a lot of handwringing over why there are very few large, successful tech companies in the region. Peter Steinberger, the creator of the agentic AI hit OpenClaw, has an answer.

Steinberger was recently hired by OpenAI and is moving from Europe to the US. An Austrian by birth, he previously split his time between London and Vienna.

On X, a professor from a European university asked why Europe couldn’t retain this tech talent.

Steinberger replied that most people in the US are enthusiastic, while in Europe, he’s scolded about responsibility and regulations.

If he built a company in Europe, he would struggle with strict labor regulations and similar rules, he added.

At OpenAI, he said most employees work 6 to 7 days a week and are paid accordingly. In Europe, that would be illegal, he added.

The most valuable company in Europe is Dutch chip-equipment maker ASML, valued at about $550 billion. In contrast, there are 10 US companies worth more than $1 trillion. Most of these are tech companies.

In 2024, a landmark EU report found that the region had fallen behind the US, particularly in innovation. It proposed a series of changes to tackle the problem, but by the end of 2025, few of the recommendations had been implemented.

Steinberger said he was hopeful about EU INC, an effort to create a single corporate legal framework to make it simpler to run a business across the region.

But this seems to be “fizzling out,” he wrote on X. “Watered down, too much egoistic national interest that ultimately hurts everyone.”

Sign up for BI’s Tech Memo newsletter here. Reach out to me via email at abarr@businessinsider.com.




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Sam Altman says OpenClaw creator Peter Steinberger is joining OpenAI to build next-gen personal agents

  • Sam Altman says OpenClaw creator Peter Steinberger is joining OpenAI.
  • OpenClaw is a viral AI agent launched last month.
  • Altman said Steinberger will build “next generation” AI agents at OpenAI.

OpenAI just scored a win in the AI talent wars.

Sam Altman said Sunday on X that Peter Steinberger, the creator of OpenClaw, the viral AI agent powering the agent-only social network Moltbook, is joining OpenAI.

Altman said Steinberger would build the “next generation” of personal AI 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,” Altman said about Steinberger. “We expect this will quickly become core to our product offerings.”

Altman added that OpenClaw, which was for a brief moment in time known as Moltbot and then Clawdbot before Anthropic took notice, will live on as an open-source project supported by OpenAI.

“The future is going to be extremely multi-agent and it’s important to us to support open source as part of that,” he wrote.

Steinberger, previously best known for founding the PDF processing company PSPDFKit, came out of retirement to launch OpenClaw in late 2025.

He is likely to bring a new perspective to OpenAI’s race to develop artificial general intelligence. Steinberger said he believes AGI is best as a specialized form of intelligence rather than a generalized one.

“What can one human being actually achieve? Do you think one human being could make an iPhone or one human being could go to space?” Steinberger said on a Y Combinator podcast in February. “As a group we specialize, as a larger society we specialize even more.”




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China’s tech giants are opening their doors to OpenClaw. The Chinese internet is lapping it up.

The viral AI agent OpenClaw — formerly known as Clawdbot, then Moltbot — has found an audience in China.

Since last week, Chinese tech companies including Tencent, Alibaba, and Volcano Engine, a cloud service platform under ByteDance, have begun integrating OpenClaw into their platforms, making it easier for Chinese users to run the agent. That includes connecting the agent to workplace tools such as Alibaba’s collaboration platform, DingTalk, and Tencent Holdings’ WeCom, the work version of China’s super app, WeChat.

OpenClaw began circulating widely in tech circles last month, attracting high-profile fans including Y Combinator CEO Garry Tan and multiple partners at Andreessen Horowitz.

The agent has also taken off among Chinese users, with demos, tutorials, and use cases spreading rapidly across local social platforms.

OpenClaw is designed to run around the clock and plug into a wide range of consumer apps, allowing users to automate tasks such as managing schedules, overseeing vibe-coding sessions, or even building AI employees.

In a post on Tencent Cloud’s developer platform, the company said last Thursday that its servers have rolled out a preconfigured OpenClaw application template, enabling users to deploy the AI assistant in the cloud with minimal setup.

Alibaba Cloud has also rolled out support for OpenClaw on its platforms and said the agent can connect to a range of models from Alibaba’s Qwen series.

Volcano Engine, ByteDance’s cloud services arm, outlined how developers can deploy Moltbot in its environment in an article published on Monday, while also flagging key safety considerations.

“Because the tool has extensive data, account, and network access permissions, please deploy it in a dedicated environment, avoid handling sensitive information, and be sure to review permissions regularly and set access restrictions for ECS and API keys,” the article said, referring to cloud servers and access credentials.

For OpenClaw to run as a digital assistant across apps, it requires access to users’ files, login details, browser activity, and other data.

Cybersecurity specialists told Business Insider in a report published on Wednesday that agents like OpenClaw can be vulnerable to “prompt injections,” a tactic that uses hidden instructions to trick AI into performing actions such as leaking data or publishing content on users’ behalf.

Despite mounting privacy and security concerns, enthusiasm for the agent among Chinese users shows little sign of slowing.

OpenClaw’s popularity on Chinese social media

Posts and demos featuring OpenClaw have surged on the Chinese social media platform RedNote.

One RedNote user who goes by “Brother C” posted a video tutorial last Tuesday, walking viewers through how to use OpenClaw. “See how the 24/7 proactive AI assistant is revolutionizing workflows,” he wrote. The post drew more than 4,000 likes and was saved over 6,000 times.

Another user posting under the nickname “Teacher Du” shared his own explainer on Monday, describing how OpenClaw could be deployed in everyday workflows. His post was saved more than 2,000 times and received over 1,000 likes.

“My experience was truly mind-blowing,” he wrote, adding that the agent could handle “all sorts of tasks” and that the “concept of a true AI employee is getting closer.”

Like their counterparts in the US, Chinese users are buying Mac Minis to run the agent. A RedNote user named Wu Bin said he had ordered a secondhand Mac Mini to serve as his “super assistant.”

“It’s incredibly convenient, I can control it remotely to organize files and handle all sorts of tasks,” he wrote.

Not everyone is convinced. A user who goes by “Programmer Yago” warned in a RedNote post on Sunday that using the agent could leave users’ data “running naked all over the internet.”

OpenClaw did not respond to a request for comment from Business Insider.




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