This feels like the natural evolution of AI agents + API integrations. We’re heading toward a world where every user has their own personal AI agent running in the background. Not just some chatbot, but something like an OpenClaw system running in a container, connected to your accounts, and actually able to act on your behalf. Instead of opening apps and clicking around, you just tell it what you want. -“Add all songs from this artist.” -“Book me the cheapest flight next weekend.” -“Organize my files.” And it just does it, because it has permission and access to your accounts. At that point, apps stop being interfaces. They’re just backends your agent talks to. And every company might need to support this kind of AI access layer, or risk becoming irrelevant. So instead of people switching between apps,apps will be competing to integrate with your personal AI. And the weird part is… this actually shifts control away from companies and back to users. Your agent becomes the gatekeeper of your data, your actions, your decisions. But that also raises a bigger question. Do we really want an AI with full access to everything we own and use? Or is this the step we need to fully automate and simplify how we use apps in everyday life? submitted by /u/AccountGold2486
Originally posted by u/AccountGold2486 on r/ArtificialInteligence
