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Google Remy: The Gemini-Powered Agent Google Built to Kill OpenClaw
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Google Remy: The Gemini-Powered Agent Google Built to Kill OpenClaw

ClawHosters
ClawHosters by Daniel Samer
3 min read

Google wants its own OpenClaw. Internally, they're calling it Remy.

According to leaked internal documents, Remy is a personal AI agent powered by Gemini that goes beyond answering questions. Google's own description puts it plainly: "It elevates the Gemini app into a true assistant that can take actions on your behalf."

That's the key phrase. Not just answering. Acting.

What Remy Actually Does

Remy connects to Gmail, Calendar, Docs, Drive, Keep, Tasks, GitHub, WhatsApp, Spotify, YouTube Music, Google Photos, Google Home, and Android utilities. It can make purchases, send messages, and share documents on your behalf. It monitors things that matter to you, handles tasks proactively, and learns your preferences over time.

Google employees are already dogfooding it internally. The spokesperson declined to comment when asked.

Why This Matters for OpenClaw Users

Jason Calacanis probably said it best: "Killing OpenClaw is the number one goal in the large language model space." Jensen Huang called it "definitely the next ChatGPT." And now Google, Anthropic, Microsoft, and Meta are all building their own versions.

Anthropic has Orbit. Microsoft has Copilot Cowork plus their "Ocean 11" team building OpenClaw-inspired features. Meta's working on Hatch, with internal testing expected by end of June.

But here's what none of them are offering: freedom to choose.

Remy locks you into Google's ecosystem. Your data flows through Google. Your agent runs on Google's servers. Your options are whatever Google decides to support.

OpenClaw is the opposite. Open-source. Provider-agnostic. Self-hostable. Works with any messaging platform, any LLM provider. Peter Steinberger built it that way on purpose before joining OpenAI in February.

Google I/O and What Comes Next

Google I/O runs May 19-20 at Shoreline Amphitheatre. Remy is widely expected to be a centerpiece announcement, especially after Project Mariner was shut down on May 4 and its browser agent technology was folded into Gemini Agent.

The AI agent race is real. Every major tech company is building one.

The question is whether you want your personal agent controlled by a corporation, or running on your own infrastructure where you pick the model, own the data, and switch providers whenever you want.

That's not a hard choice. At least not for us.

Frequently Asked Questions

Remy is Google's internal codename for a personal AI agent powered by Gemini. It goes beyond question-answering to take actions on your behalf, like sending emails, making purchases, and managing your calendar across Google's ecosystem.

Google I/O runs May 19-20, 2026. Remy is widely expected to be revealed there, but Google hasn't confirmed anything publicly. The project is currently in internal testing with Google employees.

Remy is closed-source and locked into Google's ecosystem. OpenClaw is open-source, provider-agnostic, and self-hostable. With OpenClaw, you choose your LLM provider, own your data, and deploy on your own server.

It depends on what you value. If you want zero setup and already live in Google's ecosystem, Remy might be convenient. If you want control over your data, choice of AI model, and independence from any single company, OpenClaw is the better fit.

Yes. OpenClaw is available today. You can self-host it or use a managed hosting service like ClawHosters to get running in under a minute without managing servers yourself.

Sources

  1. 1 leaked internal documents
  2. 2 OpenClaw
  3. 3 Project Mariner was shut down on May 4
  4. 4 running on your own infrastructure
  5. 5 deploy on your own server
  6. 6 OpenClaw is the better fit
  7. 7 ClawHosters