China’s ‘Lobster’ AI Craze Draws Security Warnings as Operating Costs Rise

Open-source AI tool OpenClaw has surged in China, but regulators warn it may pose cybersecurity risks as some companies report rising operating costs.
China’s ‘Lobster’ AI Craze Draws Security Warnings as Operating Costs Rise
People queue to have OpenClaw, an open-source AI assistant, installed on their laptops at Baidu headquarters in Beijing on March 11, 2026. Adek Berry/AFP via Getty Images
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An open-source artificial intelligence tool known as OpenClaw—nicknamed “lobster” by Chinese users—has surged in popularity across China’s tech community in recent months, becoming one of the country’s most talked-about AI trends. However, increasing operating costs and regulatory warnings about cybersecurity risks could slow the technology’s rapid expansion.

The Chinese regime has issued warnings that the software could pose cybersecurity and data-leak risks, highlighting the tension between Beijing’s push to accelerate AI development and its concerns over information security.