Suzhou AI association advocates for rational development of OpenClaw AI
In response to the rapidly increasing popularity of the open-source AI agent OpenClaw, the Suzhou AI Industry Association issued a proposal on Wednesday aimed at guiding how the platform should be used.
Co-released with various enterprises and institutions in Suzhou, Jiangsu province, the proposal calls for expectations about the technology's capabilities and limitations to be rational so as to avoid creating anxiety or hyping myths.
The goal is to foster a pragmatic, rational, and healthy industry development environment, the proposal said.
OpenClaw is an open-source, locally-focused AI agent framework. Unlike AI applications limited to web-based interactions, OpenClaw acts as a super assistant capable of taking over user keyboard and mouse controls, running directly on user terminals, and calling system APIs to complete complex tasks.
Recent media reports have pointed to the popularity of "raising lobsters", which derives from OpenClaw's logo, as a sign of a shift in AI from chat programs to actionable execution that opens the door for individual innovation potential and provides greater convenience for one-person company (OPC) entrepreneurs.
The proposal emphasizes four areas: recognizing the tool's true value based on user expertise and business context; defining its applicable boundaries for auxiliary tasks with high repeatability and tolerance; ensuring security compliance as a foundation for OpenClaw's application; and fostering a healthy ecosystem by discouraging overhype and trend-following.
On Monday, Wu Qingwen, Mayor of Suzhou and deputy to the 14th National People's Congress, expressed support for OpenClaw and Alibaba's similar agent, CoPaw.
He highlighted their potential to empower entrepreneurs, saying that Suzhou plans to leverage its existing OPC community to promote and train the use of open-source AI agents, potentially offering subsidies for computational resources to boost innovation.
"Every ordinary person should seize the tide of technological change, use the most advanced technology to change their lives and change their own destiny," said Wu.
A Suzhou-based technology company launched its AI-native agent platform, BoClaw, on the same day.
The Suzhou AI Industry Association will host the Suzhou OPC Practical Ability Conference and OpenClaw Strategy Open Course on March 20, focusing on enterprise AI architecture and human-machine collaboration.
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