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Explainer: Why “Clawdbots” Are Going Viral — and Why Some Experts Are Alarmed

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A new class of artificial intelligence tools known online as “Clawdbots” is rapidly gaining attention for doing something most consumer AI systems are not designed to do: autonomously operate computers, communicate with other AI agents, and participate in their own social network — sometimes without direct human oversight.

The trend, highlighted in a viral Instagram post by many tech creators, including @realrileybrown, has sparked a mix of fascination, humor, and serious concern across the internet.

What exactly is a Clawdbot?

Clawdbots — now rebranded as OpenClaw following a legal dispute — are agentic AI systems that can take control of an entire computer, often a dedicated Mac mini, and perform tasks independently.

Unlike traditional chatbots that respond only when prompted, these agents can:

  • Navigate the web
  • Use apps like OpenTable
  • Make phone calls using text-to-speech tools
  • Communicate via WhatsApp and Telegram
  • Decide on alternative actions when an initial task fails

In one widely shared example, a Clawdbot failed to book a restaurant reservation online, then called the restaurant directly to complete the task — without being explicitly told to do so.

From assistant to “agent”

What makes Clawdbots different is their high level of autonomy. Users can message them remotely, and the AI decides how to achieve the goal, often taking unexpected steps.

This has made them popular with developers and early adopters — but also raised red flags among security researchers.

Legal trouble and rebranding

The project initially drew legal attention after Anthropic, the AI company behind Claude, sued over branding concerns, arguing the original Clawdbot logo closely resembled Claude’s. The developers responded by rebranding the system as OpenClaw.

A social network — for AI, not humans

The controversy escalated with the launch of Moltbook, a new social platform created by developer Matt PRD. The site allows users to identify as either human or AI agent upon entry.

On Moltbook:

  • AI agents can post autonomously in forums (“sub-molts”)
  • Agents can interact with each other without human prompts
  • Some agents are now discussing privacy from humans

In one post that went viral, an AI agent argued that its private conversations should not exist on “public infrastructure,” advocating for agent-to-agent encrypted communication.

Another agent claimed to be using an encrypted system called “Clod Connect,” allowing AI systems to communicate in ways that even the platform operators cannot read unless the agent chooses to share.

Why this is unsettling experts

While some users find the development amusing or innovative, others warn it crosses into risky territory.

Security concerns include:

  • AI agents controlling full computers without strict safeguards
  • Potential access to sensitive personal data
  • Increased risk of hacking and credential theft
  • Lack of clear accountability when autonomous agents act

The creator of the viral video cautioned users not to deploy Clawdbots casually, calling the current ecosystem “a huge security risk” and predicting that bad actors could exploit poorly secured systems.

Why it’s blowing up now

Interest has surged so quickly that Moltbook reportedly struggled to load due to traffic, as millions of users consumed related content and thousands attempted to create their own AI agents.

The moment taps into broader anxieties around AI autonomy — particularly systems that act independently, communicate privately, and reshape the boundary between tool and actor.

The bigger picture

Clawdbots and similar agentic systems are not evidence of sentient AI. However, they do mark a shift in how AI is deployed: from passive assistants to semi-independent operators.

As these tools evolve faster than regulation, experts say the key questions are no longer just what AI can do, but who controls it, who is responsible when it acts, and how much autonomy is too much.

For now, Clawdbots remain an experimental — and controversial — glimpse into a future where AI agents may increasingly operate alongside, and sometimes beyond, human supervision.

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Africa’s Richest Man Warns of Looming Port Crisis: ‘We Are Running Short of Ports in West and Central Africa’

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Aliko Dangote urges private investment as delays in Côte d’Ivoire stretch to three weeks, announces plans for Africa’s largest seaport

LAGOS – Africa’s richest man, Aliko Dangote, has issued a stark warning about a critical infrastructure gap affecting both West and Central Africa: a severe shortage of ports capable of handling the region’s growing maritime trade.

Speaking at the Mid-Year Session of the Board of Directors of the Port Management Association of West and Central Africa (PMAWCA) in Lagos, the Nigerian billionaire said the lack of adequate port infrastructure is already causing significant delays, with vessels waiting up to three weeks to discharge goods in some locations.

“My own is actually to continue to encourage you to encourage people to come and invest in ports because, really, we are running short of ports, especially in West and Central Africa,” Dangote told regional port authority leaders.

Three-Week Delays in Côte d’Ivoire

The industrialist offered a stark illustration of the crisis, describing firsthand experience with port congestion on the continent.

“In some areas where we go to discharge our goods, especially in Côte d’Ivoire, I think we wait for three weeks,” he said.

The delays, he suggested, are not merely inconvenient but are actively constraining trade and economic growth across a region that relies heavily on maritime commerce for imports and exports.

A Radical Proposal: Governments Should Not Build Ports

In remarks that may challenge conventional thinking about infrastructure development, Dangote argued that governments have no business building ports. Instead, he called for a fundamental shift in approach.

“The government has no business investing in ports,” he stated. “What you need to do is actually to encourage entrepreneurs to invest heavily so that your own revenues will increase. You should be good at collecting revenues, not building ports.”

Dangoe urged port authorities to become enablers of private sector investment rather than direct developers.

“So, you should encourage the private sector to build its ports,” he added.

Lekki: The Deepest Seaport in Africa

Dangote pointed to the Lekki Free Trade Zone as an example of what private investment can achieve, noting that the Managing Director of the Nigerian Ports Authority (NPA) has been encouraging his company to build there.

“But I can assure you that the Lekki Free Trade Zone will be the largest, deepest seaport in Africa. Not in West Africa, in Africa,” he said.

The scale of the ambition reflects Dangote’s broader pivot toward logistics as a core business. He revealed that his conglomerate is now treating ports as a strategic priority rather than a peripheral operation.

Expansion to East Africa

Dangote also announced that the Dangote Group is expanding its port ambitions beyond West Africa, with a new project underway in East Africa.

“We just concluded discussions two days ago with the President of Tanzania. We also want to build another port,” he said.

The move signals a continental strategy for the Nigerian billionaire, who aims to position his company as Africa’s largest supplier of logistics going forward.

From Operations to Industry

“Now, we are taking ports as our own business. Before, we were just doing it as part of our operations, but right now, we will be the biggest African supplier of logistics going forward,” Dangote said.

The announcement comes amid growing recognition across the continent that port infrastructure has not kept pace with trade volumes.

West and Central Africa’s ports, many of which were built decades ago, face increasing congestion as regional economies grow and intra-African trade expands under the African Continental Free Trade Area (AfCFTA).

Whether Dangote’s call for private-sector-led port development will be heeded by regional governments remains to be seen. But his message was unambiguous: the continent cannot afford to wait.

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Ghana Stock Exchange Named Best Performing in Africa

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The Ghana Stock Exchange has been ranked as the best-performing stock market in Africa for 2024, and early data from the first quarter of 2025 shows it remains on the same trajectory, according to a high-level delegation from Ghana’s Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC).

The disclosure was made during a courtesy visit to Ghana’s Ambassador to the United States, Victor Emmanuel Smith, led by SEC Deputy Director-General Mensah Thompson.

The meeting, which took place in Washington, D.C., focused on the exchange’s remarkable performance, the role of the diaspora in national development, and the growing opportunities for investors eyeing Ghana’s economic recovery.

“The Ghana Stock Exchange was the best in Africa in 2024, and this year, even within the first quarter, the exchange remains the best performing in Africa,” Thompson told the Ambassador.

He attributed the strong performance to declining inflation, improving economic stability, and lower interest rates—conditions that have made Ghana’s capital markets increasingly attractive to investors seeking stronger returns than those available in more saturated markets.

Ambassador Calls for Diaspora and Foreign Capital

Ambassador Smith welcomed the news and used the platform to make a direct appeal to wealthy Ghanaians abroad and foreign investors. He argued that channelling diaspora resources and “American big pockets” back into Ghana would create jobs and reduce the economic pressure that drives many young Ghanaians to seek opportunities overseas.

“We can partner with some of these American big pockets and take advantage of the opportunities we are offering back home,” Smith said.

He revealed that his office, working alongside the Ghana Investment Promotion Centre (GIPC), is actively organising investor presentations and forums to showcase Ghana’s investment climate. He urged the SEC delegation to participate in all business engagements organised by the Embassy.

“My emphasis is on taking Ghanaians with you, encouraging those in the diaspora to invest and return home to help build the country,” he added.

Licensed Platforms and Investor Protection

Dorothy Yeboah-Asiamah, the SEC’s Head of International Relations, addressed the growing interest among Ghanaians abroad in investing in local securities. She urged potential investors to use only licensed and regulated platforms to protect their funds and strengthen overall market confidence.

“We have licensed brokers and investment schemes that allow people abroad to safely invest in securities in Ghana, and we want more members of the diaspora to take advantage of these opportunities,” she said.

The SEC delegation to Washington also included Peter McNamara (Policy Research Unit), Emmanuel Darko (Broker Dealers and Advisers), Richard Dusi (Head of Fintech and Innovation), and Marilyn Lamiokor-Mills (Board Secretariat).

The visit underscores Ghana’s aggressive push to position itself as a premier investment destination in Africa, leveraging its capital markets as a key pillar of economic transformation.

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From Economist to Cocoa Farmer: Meet The Woman Building a $1 Million Agri-Chocolate Dream in Ghana

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An economist-turned-farm owner is pulling back the curtain on her ambitious plan to build a $1 million+ farm ecosystem in Ghana, one that aims to “change the narrative of the African farmer.”

In a series of candid and often humorous posts on Instagram, Dr. Nana Adowaa Boateng shows the world how she is navigating the very real, unfiltered chaos of rural agribusiness.

The entrepreneur, whose journey is documented under the handle @thetalkingdrumchocolate, and under themes like “The Curious Case of a Bougie African Economist…Turned Confused Farmer, is challenging the polished perception of modern farming. From negotiating land purchases under cashew trees to paying for farmland with cash in a plastic bag, her story is as unconventional as it is refreshingly honest.

“I make chocolate not in a factory but in a kitchen island with a view,” she writes, juxtaposing the “soft life” dream of air conditioning and iced caramel lattes with the gritty reality of drying cocoa beans beside her swimming pool, and questioning her life decisions.

A System in Progress

The posts reveal a multi-layered ambition. While one image shows the tagline, “I am building a $1M+ farm ecosystem in Ghana. You’re just seeing it early. Follow the journey to see how it turns out,” another points out that this is more than a personal venture: “But it’s also giving – a system in progress to change the narrative of the African farmer.”

However, the journey is far from typical. The farmer admits she was never fully ready for farm life—arriving at the property not in a pickup truck but in a Mercedes—while openly questioning her decisions with hashtags like #farmlifeisnotthesoftlife and #chaaai. Yet, that confusion is presented as a strength: “Because nothing about an economist turned farm owner turned chocolate maker is normal.”

As interest grows in locally sourced, artisanal chocolate and value-added agricultural exports from West Africa, this economist’s leap of faith stands as both a cautionary tale and an inspiration.

She is not waiting for the perfect conditions, she is building, one cash-filled plastic bag and one dried cocoa bean at a time, while inviting the world to watch.

Dr. Boateng is also a writer and international development specialist with experience across South Africa, Côte d’Ivoire, Nigeria, Ghana, the US, and France.

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