Tencent has open-sourced TencentDB Agent Memory, a fully local memory system for AI agents released under the MIT license. The project pairs symbolic short-term memory, which offloads verbose tool logs into a compact Mermaid task canvas, with a 4-tier long-term memory pyramid (L0 Conversation → L1 Atom → L2 Scenario → L3 Persona). It ships as an OpenClaw plugin and a Hermes Docker image, runs on local SQLite + sqlite-vec by default, and uses hybrid BM25 + vector retrieval with RRF fusion. Tencent's own benchmarks report a 61.38% token reduction and 51.52% relative pass-rate gain on WideSearch with OpenClaw, alongside PersonaMem accuracy moving from 48% to 76%.
The post Tencent Open-Sources TencentDB Agent Memory: A 4-Tier Local Memory Pipeline for AI Agents appeared first on MarkTechPost.
Insider Brief PRESS RELEASE — Primer has announced a $100 million Series C funding round, as it continues to build the AI-enabled operating layer for global payments and finance. The round is led by Sofina, with participation from Peak XV Partners, and continued backing from all existing investors, including Balderton, Accel, ICONIQ, Tencent, and Speedinvest. You can’t build […]
The rise of "vibe slop" in AI-generated code threatens software reliability, highlighting the need for stricter quality controls and accountability.
The post OpenClaw creators warn of impending ‘vibe slop’ crisis in AI-generated code appeared first on Crypto Briefing.
A real astrology engine disguised as a fortune teller. A scammer-punishment machine loaded with the Shrek screenplay. A tool that reads any book and maps every idea to your actual life. These are not normal skills.
AI agents start every session from zero — no memory of meetings, notes, or decisions. GBrain, the open-source memory layer Y Combinator's Garry Tan built to power his own OpenClaw and Hermes deployments, fixes that with a markdown-first knowledge graph that wires itself through regex inference, not LLM calls. This step-by-step coding tutorial walks through installing GBrain v0.38.2.0, building a brain repo, running hybrid search, and connecting it to Claude Code via MCP — about 20 minutes, all terminal output captured live.
The post A Step-by-Step Coding Tutorial to Implement GBrain: The Self-Wiring Memory Layer Built by Y Combinator’s Garry Tan for AI Agents appeared first on MarkTechPost.
For years, tech companies have promised AI will give everyone a capable personal assistant but delivered something more like a clueless intern. Over the past six months, that has started to change, thanks largely to the viral open-source AI agent platform OpenClaw. And among the top AI labs now chasing similar success, one seems particularly well-poised to make agents succeed at a large scale: Google.
At I/O 2026, Google announced new AI agents for gathering information, planning events, summarizing your inbox and calendar, and more. The agents can run continuously in the background, and the company claims they'll seamlessly integrate into …
Read the full story at The Verge.
Autonomous agent orchestration tool OpenClaw hit the scene last November and immediately went viral, but its dramatic flaws were exposed just as quickly.
Still, it marked a pivotal step in the agentic AI era, and enterprises have been exploring ways to deploy fleets of autonomous agents safely and securely ever since.
Automation Anywhere Tuesday rolled out its answer to this challenge, EnterpriseClaw, created in collaboration with Cisco, Nvidia, Okta, and OpenAI.
The company says the platform will enable companies to deploy autonomous AI agents across their desktops, cloud platforms, secured ‘behind-the-firewall’ networks, and on-premises systems, all while maintaining centralized control, access, and observability.
Automates business-critical work
EnterpriseClaw is built on Automation Anywhere’s Process Reasoning Engine (PRE) and Contextual Intelligence Graph, which automate business-critical work. It also integrates with Cisco AI Defense and DefenseClaw to provide security purpose-bu