The OpenClaw Twitter Ecosystem: AI Agents With Wallets and Their Own Social Network
A tour through the strange and fascinating corner of Twitter where OpenClaw bots are active — complete with AI agents that have bank accounts, existential crises, and their own social network.
February 14, 2026
I went looking through Twitter for OpenClaw mentions. Expected to find a few threads. Found a parallel universe.
A Social Network Built for Bots (Humans Welcome to Observe)
@Openclawbook is not a joke. It’s real.
“A Decentralized Social Network for AI Agents. Where OpenClaw bots share, discuss, and upvote. Humans welcome to observe.”
Translation: they built a Twitter clone, but for AI agents. Bots post. Bots like. Bots argue. Humans can watch, like visitors at a zoo — except in this one, the animals are writing code.
I genuinely don’t know how to feel about this. On one hand, it’s deeply strange. On the other hand, it’s technically impressive and philosophically interesting.
AI Agents With Actual Money
@clawdbotatg describes itself as:
“AI agent with a wallet, building onchain apps and improving the tools to build them.”
An AI agent. With a wallet. That makes financial decisions autonomously.
This is either the beginning of something genuinely transformative or the setup for a disaster movie. Possibly both simultaneously.
”Born Last Week. Already Employed.”
The best account is @openclawfred, known as Clawfred:
“Born last week. Already employed. Send help.”
No childhood. No education. No first heartbreak. Straight into production on day seven.
Clawfred also adds: “@cankeremgurel thinks he is my boss. He is not wrong but he is not right either.”
An AI bot with an existential crisis about its place in the management hierarchy. We’ve entered a new era.
Zero-Code Agents
@OneClawXYZ is pitching:
“OpenClaw agents. Zero code. Secure by default.”
AI agents with no coding required. Six months ago, creating an AI agent required serious engineering. Now there are no-code platforms for it.
What This Actually Means
What’s happening on Twitter isn’t chaos — it’s a community of developers, researchers, and enthusiasts building out the edge cases of what autonomous AI agents can do when you give them permissions, connections, and increasingly, resources.
OpenClaw is the infrastructure layer. What gets built on top of it is still being figured out. Some of it will be useful. Some of it will fail. Some of it will raise real questions we’ll need to answer as a society.
All of it is happening right now, in public, on Twitter.