3 min read

🦞 Telegram Supports OpenClaw

Plus: LiteLLM Fears After Release, Pixel Office Sparks Debate, 40 Agents with One Operator

Good Morning, OpenClaw Owners!

Everything is becoming interface, incident, or illusion—systems stabilizing, breaking, or dissolving into orchestration.


Telegram Supports OpenClaw

TL;DR: Peter Steinberger said he spoke with Telegram CEO Pavel Durov and the Telegram team, who offered support for OpenClaw, and announced Ivan Zhukov as a new maintainer. The first priority is fixing a bug in Telegram’s bot streaming API that causes duplicate messages, with the goal of improving reliability for OpenClaw’s Telegram integration.


MyClaw Enters Meta Workflows

TL;DR: Mark Zuckerberg is building an AI agent to help him run Meta Platforms, as reported by The Wall Street Journal. Internally, employees are already using agent tools like MyClaw.ai to access work data, interact with colleagues, and even let agents communicate with each other.


LiteLLM Fears After Release

TL;DR: After OpenClaw 2026.3.24 launched with deeper OpenWebUI integration, users raised concerns that a LiteLLM vulnerability affecting OpenWebUI that may have exposed essential keysmight also impact OpenClaw setups. The discussion quickly spread across the community, given shared dependencies across agent tools. Peter Steinberger clarified that OpenClaw was not affected and confirmed the issue had already been fixed.


Pixel Office Sparks Debate

TL;DR: A developer shared a new OpenClaw bot dashboard project featuring a pixel-style “office” interface, quickly gaining traction as another viral build following Claw3D. While many praised its creativity, developers argued dashboards and visuals may be cosmetic, asking whether workflows improve beyond raw logs.


40 Agents, One Operator

TL;DR: Former Google product leader Jacob Bank shared how he built a 40-agent AI “team” for $500/month, handling marketing, content, and competitive tracking. His approach starts with single-purpose agents, then layers coordination over time. He treats AI as strategic collaborators—not interns—and continuously iterates, even replacing agents. The result: one person operating like a full team.


Browser MCP Unlocks Agent Control

TL;DR: Peter Steinberger showed OpenClaw now using Chrome’s MCP to let Codex directly control a live browser session, replacing the old loop of screenshots and manual guidance. Instead of humans navigating complex sites, agents can now see, click, and complete workflows end-to-end themselves, turning OpenClaw into a full think–act system where execution no longer depends on human input.


ClawCon Tokyo Draws Crowd

TL;DR: Dave Morin, former Facebook executive, announced ClawCon Tokyo for March 30, with Peter Steinberger confirming attendance, as early interest quickly exceeded expectations and forced plans for a larger venue. Community responses show attendees flying in from abroad and asking for future events in other cities.


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