This viral AI tool is the future. Don't install it yet

PCWorld 

PCWorld examines OpenClaw, an AI agent developed by Peter Steinberger that recently gained OpenAI backing through an acquisition. This autonomous tool can read, edit, delete files and build programs with system-level access, demonstrating powerful agentic AI capabilities. Despite its potential for unprecedented automation, OpenClaw poses significant security risks including data deletion and prompt injection vulnerabilities, making immediate installation inadvisable for newcomers. A month ago, practically no one had heard about Peter Steinberger's personal AI side project. Now it's taken the AI world by storm, and it just got the backing of none other than OpenAI itself. First known as Clawdbot and later as Moltbot, the now re-rebranded OpenClaw served as an "I know Kung Fu" moment for its earliest users, who were jolted by the capabilities and potential of the AI-powered tool. Put another way, OpenClaw took what had previously been an abstract concept--"agentic AI"--and made it real. It's exciting and even vertiginous stuff, and if this story marks the first time you've heard of OpenClaw, you absolutely, positively shouldn't install it.