Google Develops ’24/7 Personal Agent’ Remy, Echoing OpenClaw’s Ambitions

Google has not yet unveiled a completely autonomous AI agent, but the tech giant is actively building one. According to Business Insider, which examined an internal document, the company is crafting an AI agent known by the codename Remy. Currently, this tool is being piloted by staff members within a restricted, employee-only version of the Gemini application.

Remy is characterized as a “24/7 personal agent for work, school, and daily life” capable of performing actions on your behalf, tracking important matters, proactively managing complex tasks, and adapting to your preferences over time. Google has not provided immediate comments, and no official public release schedule has been established.

OpenClaw’s Viral Success Drives Google’s Entry into the AI Agent Market

OpenClaw, a free open-source AI agent, recently stunned the tech industry by accumulating over 100,000 GitHub stars in less than a week. This tool can autonomously respond to messages, perform research, manage files, and automate computer tasks without requiring user input.

Its popularity surged to such heights that Nvidia CEO Jensen Huang hailed it as “definitely the next ChatGPT.” The intense demand for OpenClaw was significant enough to drive up secondhand MacBook prices in China by 15%. OpenAI eventually recruited OpenClaw’s creator.

Remy appears to be Google’s strategy to create a similarly ambitious product but delivered as a refined, seamlessly integrated solution.

The AI Agent Race Intensifies Among Tech Giants

Google’s Remy project underscores that the AI agent sector has become a fierce competition. Anthropic recently introduced Claude Cowork, which can manage PC tasks without the intricate setup OpenClaw demands.

Meta purchased Manus AI and released My Computer, a desktop agent that organizes files, launches applications, and sends emails on your behalf. Meanwhile, Nvidia is developing NemoClaw, an open-source platform that enables businesses to deploy autonomous AI agents across any hardware.

While OpenClaw has encountered significant security concerns, with researchers highlighting exposed admin panels, prompt injection vulnerabilities, and plain-text credential storage, Google’s approach is expected to differ. We anticipate a deeply integrated, privacy-focused agent from a trusted platform, which could ultimately dominate the market.

Remy is currently undergoing a dogfooding phase, a standard procedure where tech companies test products internally before public release. Google’s I/O event is scheduled for later this month (May 19-20), where it is highly anticipated that the company will unveil its latest AI innovations.

AI agents are expected to be a major focus at this event, and Remy might make its debut public appearance if Google decides to reveal its plans.