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Moltbot

From EverybodyWiki Bios & Wiki

Moltbot
Developer(s)Peter Steinberger
Written inJavaScript, TypeScript, Shell
Engine
    Operating systemmacOS, Linux, Windows
    TypeArtificial Intelligence, Autonomous agent, Personal assistant
    LicenseOpen source
    Websitemolt.bot

    Search Moltbot on Amazon.

    Moltbot (formerly known as Clawdbot) is an open-source, self-hosted artificial intelligence (AI) personal assistant designed to execute local computing tasks and interface with users through standard messaging platforms. Created by Austrian developer Peter Steinberger, the software functions as an autonomous agent, capable of executing shell commands, managing files, and automating browser operations on a host machine.[1]

    History

    Origin and growth

    Moltbot was originally released in late 2025 under the name Clawdbot (stylized as Clawd.bot). Steinberger, the founder of PSPDFKit, developed the tool as a personal hobby project to create a "24/7 Jarvis-style" assistant that lived in his messaging apps.[2]

    The project saw rapid viral adoption in early 2026. Within 24 hours of its public debut on GitHub, it gained 9,000 "stars" and surpassed 60,000 stars by late January 2026, making it one of the fastest-growing open-source projects in the platform's history.[3] Its popularity reportedly led to a surge in sales of hardware like the Mac Mini, as users sought dedicated local machines to host the agent.[4]

    Rebranding

    On January 27, 2026, the project was rebranded to Moltbot after Anthropic, the developer of the Claude AI model, issued a trademark request. The name "Molt" was chosen as a reference to the biological process of a lobster shedding its shell to grow, aligning with the project's mascot, a lobster named "Molty" (formerly "Clawd").[5]

    The rebranding transition was marked by security incidents; crypto-scammers briefly seized the abandoned @clawdbot handles on X (formerly Twitter) and GitHub to promote fraudulent tokens, and Steinberger's personal account was temporarily hijacked during the move.[6]

    Features

    Moltbot is distinguished from traditional chatbots by several key architectural choices:

    • Local-First Hosting: Unlike cloud-based assistants, Moltbot is intended to be self-hosted on the user's own hardware (e.g., Raspberry Pi, Mac Mini, or a VPS) to ensure data privacy.[7]
    • Proactive Outreach: The agent can initiate conversations, send reminders, and monitor system triggers (via cron jobs) rather than waiting for a user prompt.
    • Multi-Platform Integration: It connects to over 50 messaging services including WhatsApp, Telegram, Discord, Slack, and iMessage.
    • Extensibility: Through a registry called MoltHub (formerly ClawdHub), users can install "skills" that allow the bot to interact with third-party APIs for smart home control, music management, and productivity tools.

    Security Concerns

    Security researchers have highlighted the "high-privilege" nature of the tool as a significant risk. Because Moltbot can be granted permission to run terminal commands and control browsers, it is susceptible to prompt injection attacks where malicious inputs (such as a specifically crafted email or message) could trigger unauthorized system actions.[6][8] In late January 2026, researchers discovered over 1,000 publicly exposed Moltbot instances that lacked authentication due to user misconfiguration.[1]

    See also

    References

    1. 1.0 1.1 "Moltbot (Formerly Clawdbot) Use Cases and Security [2026]". AIMultiple. Retrieved 2026-01-28.
    2. Odedina, Damilare (2026-01-28). "Clawdbot is now Moltbot: Everything you need to know". TechLoy. Retrieved 2026-01-28.
    3. "What is Moltbot? Your Open-Source AI Assistant for 2026". DigitalOcean. Retrieved 2026-01-28.
    4. "Clawdbot has changed its name to Moltbot after threat from Anthropic". India Today. 2026-01-28.
    5. L., Eric (2026-01-27). "Clawdbot Rebrands to Moltbot After Trademark Request From Anthropic". Laravel News.
    6. 6.0 6.1 "Moltbot (Clawdbot) Technical Report". Skywork.ai. 2026-01-27.
    7. "Clawdbot Is the Hot New AI Agent, But Its Creator Warns of 'Spicy' Security Risks". PCMag. 2026-01-27.
    8. "Viral AI assistant Clawdbot renamed Moltbot: What to know". Samaa TV. 2026-01-28.


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