Huawei's version of "Lobster" is finally coming.
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Author | Huang Yu
Global tech giants are rushing to compete in the "lobster" boom, and now Huawei has joined in.
On March 11, He Gang, CEO of Huawei Terminal BG, posted a screenshot of the Xiaoyi Claw Beta interface on his personal Weibo, drawing widespread industry attention.
He Gang revealed in his Weibo post that he has been using Xiaoyi Claw for several days and commented: "Very surprised, it's quite useful, and it can help me get a lot of things done!"
This public statement marks an important step forward for Huawei in the AI Agent field and suggests that "Lobster" (OpenClaw) technology will transition from a niche circle to the mainstream market, moving from desktop computers to mobile terminals including smartphones.
A Huawei Terminal insider told Wallstreetcn that Xiaoyi Claw's core is based on the HarmonyOS foundation and capabilities, with standout features including security, system-level design, and full-scenario coverage (multi-device interconnectivity, such as issuing commands on a phone and executing on a PC).
Judging from the interface screenshot shared by He Gang, Xiaoyi Claw supports one-click activation, allowing users to have a dedicated AI assistant without complex setup. The product has self-learning and deep memory capabilities, enabling it to better understand users' needs over time.
Additionally, leveraging HarmonyOS's features, Xiaoyi Claw also supports interaction across HarmonyOS devices. This means users may be able to seamlessly switch and coordinate the AI agent across devices like phones, tablets, car systems, PCs, and watches.
This all-scenario intelligent experience is exactly the core competitiveness of Huawei's HarmonyOS ecosystem.
Data security is a feature highly emphasized by Xiaoyi Claw. The Huawei Terminal insider mentioned above pointed out that for an AI Agent, security is especially important.
In this "raising lobsters" frenzy, security risks have already become apparent.
On March 10, the National Internet Emergency Response Center issued a "risk warning regarding the safe application of OpenClaw," pointing out that to enable "autonomous task execution," OpenClaw is granted high system permissions, including access to the local file system, reading environment variables, calling external service application programming interfaces (APIs), and installing extended functionality. However, because its default security configuration is extremely fragile, attackers can easily obtain full system control if they find a breach.
The National Internet Emergency Response Center recommends that relevant organizations and individual users take the following security measures when deploying and using OpenClaw, including strengthening network control, enhancing credential management, strictly managing plugin sources, and continuously monitoring patches and security updates.
AI Agents are at a key point in transitioning from concept verification to commercial application. Now, as tech giants enter the field, they are expected to see explosive growth by 2026, becoming the next hotspot after large language models.
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