The battle for the agent integration layer
Deep Dive
On February 15, the founder of the open-source AI agent framework OpenClaw announced he was joining OpenAI. OpenClaw itself remained open source, but the move sent a clear signal through the industry.
A solo developer had built a community of more than 100,000 developers, and now the ecosystem was being pulled into a major industry player. That made it harder to dismiss January's OpenClaw wave as a passing fad.
On February 26, Perplexity AI unveiled Perplexity Computer, a platform that coordinates 19 frontier models - including Claude Opus 4.6 and ChatGPT 5.2 - as parallel sub-agents. Research, coding, and financial analysis can run asynchronously while the user issues only high-level direction.
The idea resembles what Andrej Karpathy framed as a new layer above the assistant: a meta-agent that directs other agents. As AI-generated code and task execution keep scaling, demand shifts upward toward coordination itself.
“Keeping AI agents running in the background changed how I work. Research and analysis can keep moving while I am offline, so productivity no longer stops when I do.”
Counterpoint
Security debt is rising with the opportunity. Researchers found major vulnerabilities in OpenClaw skills, and Claude Code also faced a remote code execution issue that was later fixed.
