During the 2026 National Two Sessions, the open-source AI agent "Lobster" (OpenClaw) became the core of attention in the technology sector due to its powerful task execution capabilities. Zhou Hongyi, a member of the National Committee of the Chinese People's Political Consultative Conference and founder of 360 Group, revealed in an interview that 360 plans to release an "one-click installation" version soon, aiming to transform complex cloud-based AI software into a popular personal computer assistant. At the same time, Academician of the Chinese Academy of Engineering, Wang Jian, predicted that with technological iteration, the deployment cost of OpenClaw will significantly decrease and achieve full industry penetration.

Although OpenClaw has shown the potential to reshape workflows and promote the "One-Person Company" (OPC) model, its exposed security vulnerabilities have triggered dual warnings from regulators and the industry. Monitoring by the Ministry of Industry and Information Technology's Cybersecurity Threats and Vulnerability Information Sharing Platform showed that the agent poses a high risk under default settings; real-world tests by Australian security company Dvuln further confirmed that attackers can steal users' API keys and private sensitive information within a very short time. As a result, some South Korean tech giants have imposed office bans on OpenClaw.

Currently, AI governance has become a social consensus. A recent survey by the China Youth Daily showed that 87.5% of respondents pay attention to the construction of AI standardization systems, and more than half of the people expect clear boundaries for the legal use of data. With the 2026 government work report first proposing "building a new form of smart economy," improving AI governance and balancing technological innovation with data security has become a key prerequisite for deepening the "Artificial Intelligence +" action.