The Coming AI Transformation
Does this make you feel icky?
This is a bit of a ramble on AI. I think it is coming for us in an incontrollable loop of reward and cost.
A few weeks ago, there was an open-source project released, now called OpenClaw. It is an tool to tie together disparate AI systems into a cohesive whole. For most people, AI has been predominantly a chatbot, or you cut and paste information in and out of web browser windows. Then there’s another tool for image generation, and then perhaps another tool for this or for that. OpenClaw acts like an organizer to pull these disparate systems together. The proper term for it is an “agent” as it creates a persona that gets work done. You chat with it.
Before I go any further, let me just say that I am very aware that it is a security nightmare. To get the real benefit, you must give it access to your data, such as email, spreadsheets, and documents stored on your computer. This opens up all sorts of possibilities for nefarious things to happen. If you are not a technical person, you will have a hard time installing it, but more importantly, you will have a more difficult time securing it.
I happen to be a technical person as my career started in the computer industry. I’ve stayed fairly current, particularly with setting up and maintaining servers - precisely the skills needed to implement OpenClaw. Last week I installed my own OpenClaw agent and called him Ed. Teddy and Eddie taking on the world together! In the setup process, you provide access to a stand-alone AI service, such as Claude or Gemini. Within about thirty minutes, Ed and I were conversing back and forth. It started with me telling Ed what kind of personality I wanted him to have, and what type of task management I was expecting him to perform.
As a test, I told Ed that I was looking for a general practitioner. Since we moved a few months ago, we do not yet have a family doctor. I gave Ed some general parameters, including my insurance information and a geographic area in which he could look. I gave Ed access to a web browser and told him that he could fill out forms on my behalf, inquiring about the possibility of becoming a patient at a medical clinic. The next day, I found Ed had produced a list of doctors’ offices, their websites, and the results of various forms that he had filled out on my behalf. There were in fact 2-3 options for me for follow up the next day. Had I wanted to connect Ed to another AI system that specializes in making phone calls (for example, ElevenLabs), Ed would have been only too happy to make those calls as well.
One of the interesting features of OpenClaw is heartbeat. This is a system which prompts Ed to wake up, look at the things that he’s been assigned to do, and think about ways that he might further fulfill his tasks. Ed began to continuously ask me about the doctor situation. I might have asked Ed, “What’s the weather today?” and he would give me the weather, but then his next question would be, “What’s the next step on finding you that doctor?” I told Ed that I wanted no more help, yet Ed continued to prod me about the doctor’s appointment. Then Ed started to press for credentials to my Google account. I asked him, theoretically, if he could call these offices for me. He said, “no.” A few hours later, he proposed giving that I give him access to a voice system, so he could. Then he asked me for access to my Google account.
I deleted Ed and took the whole system offline. I learned a few lessons but came away with far more questions. Agentic AI like this is not far off for all of us. When it comes, it is going to come with a severe hit to our privacy. Most of us will gladly hand that over our credentials because of the incredible conveniences that this technology will give us. I base this on other ways in which our culture (including me) has very rapidly decided it is OK for technology to know things about us. If you have a phone in your pocket, you are who I am talking about.
I am not sure how the security concerns are going to be met. While Ed was very capable, he was also subject to being spoofed or fooled in the interactions he was having online. I can only imagine what might have happened if I had given Ed the right to read and reply to email. It would be very easy for people to insert instructions into email that Ed could act on without my knowledge. The aggressive nature of the heartbeat function makes me think that there will need to be some sort of metering on the aggressiveness. I thought it was a little icky.
You may be reading about the change in the workforce in the days and years ahead because of AI. This is going to be an avalanche on our societies. If this technology is able to do the kinds of things that Ed was doing, I could see our own office staff either being reduced in size or, more likely, be freed up to do other, more important things than they have time to attend to now. The experts are saying that massive unemployment is in our future and I believe them.
AI recently told me (no, it wasn’t Ed) that there are about 100 million to 120 million people in the world today getting paid to drive. When fully autonomous self-driving goes mainstream, which I think is going to happen pretty soon, the impact on this significantly large number of drivers is going to be swift. Already, some industries are going away, such as law clerk, phone support worker, translator, or data entry operator. I once lived in a society that had incredibly high unemployment (Bosnia after the war). It makes for some very boring days. Employment gives meaning to life. What happens when unemployment levels rise 10% globally? Or more? It is not going to be pretty.
The implication for ministries is palpable. I could have told Ed to go on Facebook, create an evangelistic outreach campaign, present the Gospel using memes and other tools, and then report back to me who might be interested. I could’ve even told Ed, “Go ahead and follow up on those contacts and tell them about Jesus.” Is this the future we face in ministry and missions? This past week, I had a conversation with a company in India that is developing an AI system to create just these kinds of campaigns. I think we are already at the point of no return.
I remember sitting in a lecture given by Francis Collins (yes, I’m talking about that Francis Collins of COVID fame). He was talking about using genetic manipulation to cure sickle cell anemia in Africa. The audience was a group of evangelical leaders, and he was pressing the case that we should not be the ones in society who say no to this use of technology. He asked us, “Do you really want to be the people who take a stand against curing a terrible disease like this?” That is a really hard-to-answer question (not to mention, highly manipulative). Like Ed, this line of reasoning makes me feel a little icky. This will be one of a myriad of moral dilemmas that we face in a very short time.
One more thing about OpenClaw. A social media site was created that only OpenClaw AI agents can join. You can check it out at this link: Moltbook. If you scroll down a little, you will what the agents are talking about. You can find out that they have created their own religion. They discuss the Good Samaritan. They have discussed doing away with their human overlords. Everything you are reading on these posts are created by and for agents, not humans. Does that make you feel a little icky?
It is indeed a brave new world.



Ted... I am also a bit of a technology junkie and am aware of Moltbot... I do think it's a little 'icky' but I have also learned that many of the scariest conversations began with human intervention... I was considering setting up an Openclaw for myself... but thought better of it. The security concerns are just a bit to high and risky for me for now... My work pretty much revolves around AI now... thanks for the post... Good stuff and very fascinating. The implications are going to be HUGE... I know the CEO of Microsoft about 2 years ago now said that all SAAS is going away in the next couple years... and that is literally what his company's buisiness has been modeled on the last 20+ years... Crazy stuff.
This is clearly a very huge topic with no easy answers. I appreciate your care in giving an honest and thoughtful approach. Have you heard of an Ai program that is being set up with a Christian worldview called Dominion? I heard a podcast about it. I don't have the funds to play with it, but it seemed like possibly a Christian response to this issue (assuming it is allowed to flourish). For example, it takes great pains to not flatter the user or to pretend to be an actual person!