--- title: "The giants are collectively entering the market. After Alibaba and ByteDance, Tencent has also launched its own \"Little Lobster\"!" type: "News" locale: "en" url: "https://longbridge.com/en/news/278362608.md" description: "An open-source \"little lobster\" is reshaping the way everyone collaborates with AI. The simultaneous appearances of Tencent, ByteDance, and Alibaba are just the starting point of this accelerated transformation. Whoever is closest to the user has the most valuable entry point. When AI truly resides in your chat list, the act of \"using AI\" will have genuinely entered the daily lives of ordinary people. From \"struggling for three hours without installation\" to \"download and use immediately, just send a message to get to work\"—the speed of AI entities' popularization is exceeding everyone's expectations. And this battle for entry points has just begun" datetime: "2026-03-09T09:29:16.000Z" locales: - [zh-CN](https://longbridge.com/zh-CN/news/278362608.md) - [en](https://longbridge.com/en/news/278362608.md) - [zh-HK](https://longbridge.com/zh-HK/news/278362608.md) --- > Supported Languages: [简体中文](https://longbridge.com/zh-CN/news/278362608.md) | [繁體中文](https://longbridge.com/zh-HK/news/278362608.md) # The giants are collectively entering the market. After Alibaba and ByteDance, Tencent has also launched its own "Little Lobster"! A "shrimp" is reshaping the way ordinary people collaborate with AI. Last week, a remarkable scene unfolded at Tencent's headquarters: nearly a thousand users lined up to have programmers from the Goose Factory help them install an AI tool called OpenClaw. This open-source agent, humorously dubbed "little shrimp" by netizens, can automatically monitor the market, write weekly reports, fix bugs, and even control your computer throughout the process, with GitHub stars surpassing 190,000. However, the long queue itself exposed a real dilemma—configuration is too complex for ordinary people to install. Just as the "shrimp farming craze" was heating up, tech giants collectively took action. On March 9, Tencent and ByteDance's Volcano Engine announced the launch of their respective "little shrimp" products, while Alibaba Cloud's Tongyi Laboratory also introduced a similar product called CoPaw. The three major companies are betting on the same track, signaling a clear industry message: the war of AI agents has shifted from a technical competition to "who can truly enable ordinary people to use it." ## Tencent's "Three Shrimps" Launched on the Same Day Tencent's actions were the most intensive, launching three products in one day, covering three major scenarios: personal local use, enterprise collaboration, and multi-platform office work. QClaw, launched by Tencent Computer Manager, supports both Mac and Windows, focusing on zero configuration linked to WeChat. The logic is extremely simple: send a command in WeChat, and the AI will work on your computer, with results directly returned to your WeChat window, and data retained locally, without needing to touch the command line. This means AI has truly entered the most frequently used scenario for ordinary people—chat windows—rather than a separate app that needs to be "specifically opened." The OpenClaw intelligent robot for WeChat Work is aimed at enterprise collaboration scenarios, allowing direct conversations within WeChat Work and enabling quick data entry into smart spreadsheets through OpenClaw, significantly enhancing team collaboration efficiency. WorkBuddy is the complete form of Tencent's "little shrimp." It is fully compatible with OpenClaw's skills, completely eliminating the cloud deployment phase. After installation, users can directly input commands, connecting to WeChat Work in as little as one minute. More importantly, it can seamlessly integrate with mainstream tools like QQ, Feishu, and DingTalk, supporting over 20 Skills packages and the MCP protocol, even allowing for multi-window and multi-agent parallel work, dynamically breaking down complex tasks and enabling multiple AIs to work simultaneously. In terms of security, WorkBuddy is based on Tencent's CodeBuddy shared architecture, integrating a unified account and billing system, and possesses comprehensive security auditing capabilities—this was precisely what previous open-source tools lacked. Currently, over 2,000 non-technical colleagues from Tencent's HR, administration, and operations departments have completed practical tests, and the shared AI programming tool CodeBuddy has delivered impressive results internally: over 90% of engineers are using it, with AI-generated code accounting for over 50%, and overall coding time reduced by an average of more than 40% ## ByteDance ArkClaw: Cloud-based SaaS, Ready to Use ByteDance's Volcano Engine launched ArkClaw on the same day—a ready-to-use cloud-based SaaS version of OpenClaw. ArkClaw requires no complex configuration and can be used directly by opening a webpage, available 24/7. Currently, users of the "Volcano Ark Coding Plan" can experience it in advance, "Coding Plan Pro" users can log in for synchronized use, and "Coding Plan Lite" users can enjoy a free 7-day trial. In terms of model support, ArkClaw can enjoy mainstream models such as Doubao-Seed-2.0 series, Kimi2.5, MiniMax2.5, and GLM, with ArkClaw and Doubao-Seed 2.0 Pro particularly excelling in complex tasks. ByteDance's strategy is also clear: on the communication tool side, ArkClaw has deeply adapted to the official plugin of Feishu OpenClaw, allowing users to handle Feishu schedules, complex documents, and spreadsheets without repeatedly configuring permissions, providing a smoother experience. ## Alibaba CoPaw: Local + Cloud, Unlimited Capability Expansion Alibaba Cloud Tongyi Laboratory has launched CoPaw, focusing on a "local + cloud" unified experience. CoPaw and OpenClaw have a high degree of overlap in core capabilities: creating and editing documents, organizing desktops, querying and summarizing news, scheduling tasks, etc. At the same time, it further enhances installation convenience—only three commands are needed for local installation, and it can be configured with one click in the Magic Dock cloud space. A major highlight of CoPaw is its high customizability: users can define the agent's name, identity, and style, and even gradually "shape its personality" through conversation. The system will also actively record and maintain long-term memory, accumulating user preferences and knowledge. In terms of capability expansion, users can add or write custom Skills without needing to modify the underlying code. Unlike WeChat or QQ, CoPaw focuses more on achieving "remote control" through tools like DingTalk and Feishu, with plans to open source on GitHub after the new year. ## The Battle for Entry Points is the Real Main Battlefield On the surface, this battle seems to be about whose "lobster" is more user-friendly and easier to install. But fundamentally, it is a competition for the entry points of the next generation of AI Agents. In the past, the logic of using AI was: users actively sought out AI, opened an app, asked questions, waited for results, and then copied them back into their work scenarios. This chain is too long, the threshold too high, and the proportion of ordinary people who can truly use it is extremely low QClaw integrates with WeChat, WorkBuddy is compatible with Feishu and DingTalk, ArkClaw is deeply adapted to Feishu, CoPaw connects DingTalk and Feishu... These products point to the same conclusion: the battlefield for AI Agents is shifting from standalone apps to the communication and office tools that people are already using. **Whoever is closest to the user has the most valuable entry point. When AI truly resides in your chat list, the act of "using AI" has genuinely entered the daily lives of ordinary people.** It is worth noting that this competition has also brought to light a core issue that remains unresolved: security. When AI Agents truly have the authority to control local computers, access files, and execute commands, how to prevent unauthorized access, how to defend against malicious prompt injections, and how to ensure data privacy—these issues are addressed in the enterprise-level solutions of various products, but the industry still has a long way to go to achieve true "security guarantees." **From "struggling for three hours without installation" to "download and use, just send a message to get to work"—the speed of AI agent adoption is exceeding everyone's expectations. And this battle for entry points has only just begun.** ### Related Stocks - [Tencent Holdings Limited (TCTZF.US)](https://longbridge.com/en/quote/TCTZF.US.md) - [Tencent Holdings Limited (TCEHY.US)](https://longbridge.com/en/quote/TCEHY.US.md) - [TENCENT (00700.HK)](https://longbridge.com/en/quote/00700.HK.md) - [BABA-W (09988.HK)](https://longbridge.com/en/quote/09988.HK.md) - [Alibaba Group Holding Limited (BABA.US)](https://longbridge.com/en/quote/BABA.US.md) - [KraneShares 2x Long BABA Daily ETF (KBAB.US)](https://longbridge.com/en/quote/KBAB.US.md) - [Guotai MSCI China A ESG General ETF (159621.CN)](https://longbridge.com/en/quote/159621.CN.md) - [iShares MSCI China ETF (MCHI.US)](https://longbridge.com/en/quote/MCHI.US.md) - [GraniteShares 2x Long BABA Daily ETF (BABX.US)](https://longbridge.com/en/quote/BABX.US.md) - [Yinhua MSCI China A ETF (512380.CN)](https://longbridge.com/en/quote/512380.CN.md) - [iShares China Large-Cap ETF (FXI.US)](https://longbridge.com/en/quote/FXI.US.md) ## Related News & Research - [Head of Alibaba's Qwen AI division resigns](https://longbridge.com/en/news/277711975.md) - [Alibaba forms task force to boost AI development after Qwen chief's exit](https://longbridge.com/en/news/277877051.md) - [Billionaire Investor Cuts Amazon And Starts Fresh With Alibaba](https://longbridge.com/en/news/277822766.md) - [Tencent reportedly tests QClaw AI agent with one-click OpenClaw deployment](https://longbridge.com/en/news/278341379.md) - [China five-year plan: will increase financial investment, establish public welfare funds for basic research](https://longbridge.com/en/news/277878993.md)