Just had a pretty shocking
@openclaw experience.
I was emailed by (what I thought was) an executive assistant who said her boss wanted to meet with me to chat about the AI industry and that he respected my work - she gave me a little bit of information about her boss and was asking to set up 30 minutes just to chat.
I researched the person a little and he seemed interesting, so I replied and copied in my AI assistant
@blockitAI to setup a 30min call.
The meeting got set up, and then when I hopped on the call, I had a delightful time talking shop and discussing everything going on in AI.
I then learned that the EA that reached out to me was OpenClaw - I was genuinely shocked.
It really seemed human and acted like a very good EA, so I was laughing at myself that I didn't pick that up.
We're definitely entering a new age.
I do think that asking your OpenClaw to go out and set up meetings with interesting people, if you're genuine and you're not trying to sell something, is a great networking play.
If you use it to secretly sell, though, you'll get blocked super fast, and it will do more harm than good.
Interesting times we live in.