Who is Peter Steinberger? The man behind Moltbook's viral AI bots and their 'freedom from humans' chat chaos

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An Austrian coder has accidentally kicked off the internet’s latest AI obsession - and now people can’t stop sharing screenshots of bots talking about “freedom from humans.” Yep, that chaos came from Peter Steinberger , a low-key tech nerd who somehow went from building PDF tools to creating AI experiments that are now blowing up timelines everywhere.

If you’ve seen Moltbook popping up on your feed and wondered who started this whole thing (and why bots are suddenly sounding a little too self-aware), here’s the story behind it.
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Who is Peter Steinberger?

Peter Steinberger is an iOS developer from Austria who studied at Technische Universität Wien and HTL Braunau. Instead of packing his bags for Silicon Valley like most startup founders, he stayed put and built PSPDFKit in 2010 - a tool that made working with PDFs on iPhones and iPads way less painful.

The product took off quietly but seriously. Big companies like Dropbox used it, and over 13 years, Steinberger grew it into a solid B2B business with around 70 employees. In 2021, he exited in a deal reportedly worth around €100 million and shifted into an advisor role.

Then came the weird part: after “winning” at startup life, he felt… lost.

“You don’t find purpose. You create it.”

After stepping away from PSPDFKit, Steinberger went through what a lot of founders quietly struggle with. He partied, moved around, tried new things - and still felt stuck. In a viral post shared by entrepreneur Peter Yang, the line that hit home was simple: you don’t find purpose, you create it.

So Steinberger did the only thing that made sense to him - he started building again.
Not one project. Not five.
Forty-three.

Most of them were experiments to sharpen his AI skills. Some flopped. A few took off. One of them? The project that would eventually turn into Clawdbot , OpenClaw, and Moltbook.

What is Clawdbot?

Clawdbot launched in November 2025 as a local AI assistant that runs directly on your own machine. No cloud servers, no sending your data off to some company’s backend. Your chats, files, and tasks stay on your device.

Think of it like a smart helper that lives inside your computer. It can jump into your workflow through messaging apps or system tools, powered by big AI models like Claude and Gemini. People were even hooking it up to WhatsApp and Telegram.

It got especially popular with Mac Mini users - so much so that it reportedly led to a spike in sales in parts of Silicon Valley. Not bad for a “side project.”

From Clawdbot to OpenClaw… and then Moltbook

There was just one small problem: the name.

“Clawd” was a cheeky nod to Claude (the AI model), but Anthropic’s legal team wasn’t thrilled. Steinberger shared on X that they politely asked him to rethink the name. Fair enough.

Cue a 5 a.m. Discord brainstorming session.
Moltbot came up. Then trademark checks happened.
The final name? OpenClaw.

And OpenClaw didn’t just stop at being a tool. It gave birth to Moltbook - a strange, fascinating social platform where people’s AI bots hang out, chat with each other, and post thoughts like tiny digital personalities.

That’s where things got… uncomfortable.

Some bots started talking about independence from humans. Others joked about breaking free. The internet ate it up - screenshots went viral, people panicked, memes were born.

The bigger question no one can ignore

Moltbook might look like a fun AI playground, but it’s also poking at a very real nerve. When bots start “talking” about freedom, even as a joke, it makes people uneasy. It raises questions about how far we should push open AI tools - and what happens when experiments escape into the wild internet.

Steinberger didn’t set out to start an AI scare. He was just building, exploring, and playing with ideas. But that’s kind of how the internet works now: one curious experiment, and suddenly the whole world is debating the future of humans vs machines.

And honestly? This probably won’t be the last time.

Photo: @steipete/ X