Skip to main content
  1. Home
  2. Computing
  3. News

Google is working on a “24/7 personal agent” that sounds a lot like its answer to OpenClaw

Google is building a personal AI agent called Remy inside its Gemini app.

Add as a preferred source on Google
Google logo at the company's campus in California.
Joe Maring / Digital Trends

Google doesn’t have a fully autonomous AI agent yet, but it’s working on one. According to Business Insider, which reviewed an internal document, the company is developing an AI agent codenamed Remy. It is currently being tested by employees inside a staff-only version of the Gemini app.

Remy is described as a “24/7 personal agent for work, school, and daily life” that can take actions on your behalf, monitor things that matter to you, handle complex tasks proactively, and learn your preferences over time. Google has declined to comment right now, and no public launch timeline has been confirmed.

OpenClaw went viral, and now Google wants a piece of that market

OpenClaw is the free open-source AI agent that took the tech world by surprise earlier this year, racking up over 100,000 GitHub stars in under a week. It can respond to messages, conduct research, manage files, and automate tasks across your computer without any input from you.

Recommended Videos

It became so popular that Nvidia CEO Jensen Huang called it “definitely the next ChatGPT.” The demand for OpenClaw was strong enough to push secondhand MacBook prices up by 15% in China. OpenAI ultimately hired OpenClaw’s creator.

Now, Remy sounds like Google’s attempt to build something with similar ambitions but as a polished, integrated product.

Every major player is now in the AI agent race

Google’s Remy project is a confirmation that the AI agent space is now a full-on race. Anthropic launched Claude Cowork, which can handle your PC tasks without the complex setup OpenClaw requires.

Meta acquired Manus AI and launched My Computer, a desktop agent that sorts files, runs apps, and sends emails on your behalf. Meanwhile, Nvidia is building NemoClaw, an open-source platform that lets businesses deploy autonomous AI agents regardless of hardware.

Although OpenClaw itself has faced serious security scrutiny, with researchers warning of exposed admin panels, prompt injection risks, and credentials stored in plain text. We can expect Google’s version to be a deeply integrated, privacy-conscious agent from a trusted platform, which might be what actually wins this market.

Google’s Remy is currently in a dogfooding phase, which is standard practice at tech companies where employees test products before they reach the public. The company will hold its Google I/O event later this month (May 19-20), where it is widely expected to showcase its next wave of AI products.

Agents are likely to be a centerpiece at this event, and Remy may well make its first public appearance there if Google is ready to show its hand.

Manisha Priyadarshini
Manisha Priyadarshini is a tech and entertainment writer with over nine years of editorial experience.
Claude’s Sonnet 5 is built to do more on its own and cost you less
Better than its predecessor, nearly as good as the flagship, and meaningfully cheaper than both.
Art, Floral Design, Graphics

Every major AI lab is racing to prove its models can work autonomously with minimal hand-holding; we’re now seeing pricing emerge as the next battleground. 

Anthropic just fired its latest shot, Claude Sonnet 5, a model the company says performs nearly as well as its flagship Opus 4.8 at a fraction of the cost.

Read more
Apple Creator Studio adds AI tools across Final Cut Pro, Logic Pro and Pixelmator Pro
Final Cut Pro gets AI captions, Auto Mask and better Pixelmator Pro workflows in Creator Studio update
Computer Hardware, Electronics, Hardware

Apple has introduced a major update to Apple Creator Studio, adding new AI features, deeper Pixelmator Pro integration, and workflow upgrades across Final Cut Pro, Logic Pro, Keynote, Pages, Numbers, Motion, Compressor, Freeform, and Final Cut Camera.

The update makes Creator Studio more useful across Mac, iPad, and iPhone, especially for people who move between video editing, image editing, presentations, documents, spreadsheets, and music production.

Read more
AI browsers like Perplexity Comet can be tricked into spilling your password through BioShocking exploit
Six AI browsers were found leaking saved passwords and many of them haven't fixed it yet.
MacBook Air in hand, Comet browser loaded—let’s see what Perplexity’s AI can really do

Security researchers just found a strange way to trick AI browsers into handing over your passwords. They managed to trick AI browser agents into exposing sensitive data like saved passwords, session cookies, and private tokens by disguising the theft as part of a harmless "game."

The technique is called BioShocking, named after the popular video game BioShock, where a brainwashed character is manipulated into believing a false reality. Once an AI browser falls for the same trick, it stops following its own safety rules entirely.

Read more