At the TED 2026 conference in Vienna, Peter Steinberger—the creator of the viral AI agent OpenClaw—delivered a provocative talk titled “The Lobster is Loose, and It’s Not Going Back.” His address signaled a shift from traditional “chatbots” to autonomous “agents” that act as an invisible operating system for daily life.
The “Aha” Moment Steinberger described a breakthrough in early 2025 following a period of personal uncertainty. He realized that the “bottleneck” of the modern era was no longer building software, but syncing the fragmented parts of our digital lives. He famously noted that during his initial experiments, he built 44 projects in just a few months because AI had automated the “boring parts” of coding.
What is OpenClaw? OpenClaw (often affectionately called “Molty”) is an open-source, self-hosted AI agent designed to run locally on a user’s hardware. Unlike cloud-based assistants, it acts as a “24/7 Jarvis” that can:
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Operate Autonomously: It doesn’t just talk; it executes tasks like managing emails, calendars, and complex workflows across messaging apps like WhatsApp and Discord.
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Self-Improve: The agent can write its own code to create new “skills,” allowing it to adapt to a user’s specific needs without manual programming.
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Prioritize Privacy: By running locally, it maintains a “Memory” in simple Markdown files on the user’s machine, preventing personal data from being siloed by big tech corporations.
The “Lobster” Metaphor The phrase “the lobster is loose” refers to the irreversible nature of this technology. Steinberger argued that now that individuals—not just engineers, but “builders” with no formal training—have tasted the power of autonomous personal agents, the demand for decentralized, open-source AI cannot be contained or “put back into the tank” by regulators or large tech monopolies.
A New Career Path Steinberger’s talk comes just weeks after he joined OpenAI while simultaneously transitioning OpenClaw into a nonprofit, open-source foundation. He framed the future not as a world of “programmers,” but as one of “builders” who use AI agents to manage “one-person companies.”
Why 80% of Apps will Disappear – Peter Steinberger
This video features an in-depth interview where Steinberger explains the technical philosophy behind OpenClaw and why he believes autonomous agents will eventually replace the majority of traditional software applications.
