Red Hat’s OpenClaw maintainer just made enterprise Claw deployments a lot safer
On Tuesday, Red Hat principal software engineer Sally O’Malley released a new open source tool called Tank OS to make it easier to deploy and manage OpenClaw agents more safely.
It makes OpenClaw safer and easier to maintain en masse.
There is also a growing number of startups building competing claw alternatives that they say are safer (like NanoClaw).
What makes O’Malley’s project notable is that she is an OpenClaw maintainer.
That means she’s among the select software engineers working with creator Peter Steinberger to decide which features and bugs get worked on. In her case, she focuses on making OpenClaw work better in enterprise use cases, and with Red Hat’s various flavors of the Linux operating system. (While Steinberger was hired by OpenAI, he still leads the independent open source OpenClaw project. )
She began with an open source container tool called Podman, created by a colleague at Red Hat.
They can run a Linux app on a Windows or Mac machine, for instance.
Her tool includes everything needed to make OpenClaw useful without human oversight, like state (the part that allows it to remember); the ability to store API keys (the credentials for accessing subscriptions and services); and other features. Users can run multiple Tank OS instances on a machine to do different tasks, never sharing passwords or credentials between them, and no OpenClaw instance can gain access to anything else running on the computer.
“It’s not a tool that you can use easily unless you do have some sort of technical experience,” she said. Stories abound, such as the Meta AI security researcher whose Claw started deleting all of her work email, or an agent that downloaded in plain text all of a user’s WhatsApp DMs. There’s also a growing crop of malware aimed at OpenClaw users. To be sure, Tank OS isn’t really for techno novices either, she says. You have to be comfortable installing and maintaining software on your computer, she says.
Tank OS is also not the only OpenClaw implementation working in containers.
NanoClaw, for instance, is doing a similar thing with well-known container company Docker.
It allows them to update the agents the same way they already manage other containers.
“My role within OpenClaw is really my interest in it,” O’Malley said.
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