3 min read

🦞 OpenClaw Ownership Clash

Plus: Claude Code Copies OpenClaw, OpenClaw 3.24 Just Dropped

Good Morning, OpenClaw Owners!

Control tightens, limits surface, and execution slips to whoever keeps running.


OpenClaw Ownership Clash

TL;DR: Alex Finn highlighted a major OpenClaw update adding support for Claude Code, Cursor MCP, and Exa, while mistakenly claiming OpenAI had acquired the project. Peter Steinberger quickly responded in public, correcting the claim and clarifying that OpenClaw is owned by an independent foundation he leads, not OpenAI, firmly reiterating the project has not been acquired.


Claude Code Copies OpenClaw

TL;DR: Anthropic launched Claude Computer Use, allowing Claude to operate computers, run workflows, and execute tasks directly within a controlled, enterprise-safe environment. This move brings OpenClaw’s agent paradigm into a polished product, but shifts control back to the provider. While enterprises gain security and compliance, it sacrifices the core appeal that drew users to OpenClaw—privacy, flexibility, and ownership.


OpenClaw 3.24 Just Dropped — MyClaw.ai Already Updated

OpenClaw just released v2026.3.24, and MyClaw.ai is already running it.

If you’re hosting your agents on MyClaw, you can upgrade your instance to 3.12 immediately and get the newest improvements without touching installs, configs, or deployments.

Highlights from this release:

  • 🔌 Improved OpenAI API — talk to sub-agents with @openwebui
  • 🎛️ Skill & tool management Control UI
  • 🎨 Slack interactive reply buttons
  • đź’… Native Microsoft Teams
  • đź§µ Smart Discord auto-thread naming

OpenClaw updates seem back on track this time.

Sign up on MyClaw to start directly with OpenClaw 3.24, or upgrade your existing instance to 3.24 with one click. 🚀


Hardware Can’t Catch Up

TL;DR: The article from 36Kr shows OpenClaw triggering a wave of hardware upgrades and industry adoption, with Xiaomi, Huawei, and others racing to embed agent-based assistants across phones, wearables, and robots. Yet the bottleneck isn’t OpenClaw itself—its orchestration ability is ahead. Instead, limited APIs, immature skills, hardware constraints, and security risks prevent devices from fully supporting what these agents can already do.

MyClaw’s server-side architecture does not face these hardware-level constraints, allowing agents to execute more complex workflows without being bottlenecked by device limitations.


Always-On Competitive Intelligence

TL;DR: A developer describes using OpenClaw with a low-cost API to continuously monitor competitors across sites, reviews, and launches. The system captures fleeting changes like temporary pricing edits, surfaces strategic insights such as feature gaps and risks, and builds a long-term, queryable history. Unlike other tools, OpenClaw persistently watches and remembers, turning scattered signals into structured competitive intelligence.


OpenClaw Runs Cow Farms

TL;DR: A viral X post showed Oleksandr, a former Uber self-driving engineer, using OpenClaw to automate large-scale Canadian cattle farms, managing thousands of cows while farmers interact via WhatsApp. The setup reportedly improves revenue and operations, but sparked debate online over what is actually automated and the reliability in edge cases.


OpenClaw Fuels SaaS Surge

TL;DR: A developer announced his product Postiz reached $70K in monthly recurring revenue, jumping from $20K just one month earlier. Built over 1.5 years, the product recently accelerated in growth after integrating OpenClaw into its workflow, with the founder highlighting the tool as a key factor behind its rapid recent expansion.


Run OpenClaw on MyClaw.ai - No setup, No tech skills, Always-on 👇