Microsoft launches Scout, an OpenClaw-inspired personal assistant

Pearlapp1 pts0 comments

Microsoft launches Scout, an OpenClaw-inspired personal assistant | TechCrunch

SearchSubmit

Site Search Toggle

Mega Menu Toggle

Topics

Latest

AI

Amazon

Apps

Biotech & Health

Climate

Cloud Computing

Commerce

Crypto

Enterprise

EVs

Fintech

Fundraising

Gadgets

Gaming

Google

Government & Policy

Hardware

Instagram

Layoffs

Media & Entertainment

Meta

Microsoft

Privacy

Robotics

Security

Social

Space

Startups

TikTok

Transportation

Venture

More from TechCrunch

Staff

Events

Startup Battlefield

StrictlyVC

Newsletters

Podcasts

Videos

Partner Content

TechCrunch Brand Studio

Crunchboard

Contact Us

Image Credits: Deb Cohn-Orbach/UCG/Universal Images Group / Getty Images

AI

Microsoft launches Scout, an OpenClaw-inspired personal assistant

Russell Brandom

11:02 AM PDT · June 2, 2026

In the first weeks of 2026, OpenClaw spread through the AI world like a sonic boom, introducing many of the industry’s most ambitious technologists to the joy and chaos of an unrestrained AI agent. The project’s momentum tailed off after OpenAI scooped up its founder, but the influence is still being felt — particularly at Microsoft.

Now Microsoft is launching Scout, a new AI assistant meant to bring the power and flexibility of OpenClaw into the Microsoft 365 ecosystem. Built on the OpenClaw framework, Scout is an always-on agentic assistant, designed to work alongside the user with a persistent identity and style. Users name their own Scout instance — in my demo, it was named Sebastian — and are meant to give it ongoing feedback on tasks they want automated.

As Scout VP Omar Shahine put it, the idea is to create an assistant that actively adapts to the user’s needs. “We all have our interesting quirks in how we work, and people are codifying those patterns into memories and skills that persist in their agent,” Shahine told me. “Then the agent becomes more capable, better understanding you and gaining more agency and exercising judgments.”

Available through Microsoft’s Frontier program, which gives early adopters access to experimental Microsoft products, Scout will require a GitHub Copilot subscription to use.

Scout is based in the cloud but operates across the desktop and web browser also, so it’s easy to connect to inboxes, calendars, and other systems. Scout will come with prepackaged skills for calendar management and drafting meeting agendas, among others, but Shahine expects the real value to be in the skills users develop on their own. That customization loop — where the assistant learns from user behavior and becomes more capable over time — is the same dynamic that has made consumer AI tools sticky; the more you invest in training your assistant, the harder it is to walk away.

The system also comes with extensive security protections, meant to address concerns of unsupervised AI agents running amok, a real issue that OpenClaw surfaced earlier this year when one agent was reported to have acted erratically inside a researcher’s inbox (among other examples). Scout will come with a built-in "policy conformance system" that will continuously check whether the system is operating according to set guidelines, and each conformance check will produce its own audit trail.

Scout is part of a range of AI products Microsoft launched at its annual Build developer conference, including the hardware-oriented Project Solara, an update to Copilot, and a new reasoning AI model.

Topics

AI, Microsoft, Microsoft Build, openclaw

When you purchase through links in our articles, we may earn a small commission. This doesn’t affect our editorial independence.

Russell Brandom

AI Editor

Russell Brandom has been covering the tech industry since 2012, with a focus on platform policy and emerging technologies. He previously worked at The Verge and Rest of World, and has written for Wired, The Awl and MIT’s Technology Review.<br>He can be reached at russell.brandom@techcrunch.com or on Signal at 412-401-5489.

View Bio

June 18

Los Angeles

Get an inside look at what it takes to scale and succeed from leaders at Mach Industries, Founders Fund, and Shinkei Systems. Through candid fireside chats and high-impact networking, you’ll walk away with valuable insights and new connections.

REGISTER NOW

Most Popular

Google will pay SpaceX $920M per month for compute

Sean O'Kane

Mira Murati steps back into the spotlight, carefully

Connie Loizos

Microsoft launches Scout, an OpenClaw-inspired personal assistant

Russell Brandom

Hackers hijacked Instagram accounts by tricking Meta AI support chatbot into granting access

Lorenzo Franceschi-Bicchierai

Anthropic files to go public

Kirsten Korosec

DuckDuckGo makes its ‘no-AI’ search engine easier to access as its traffic booms

Sarah Perez

Strava declares war on scrapers ahead of IPO

Ivan Mehta

Loading the next article

Error loading the next article

© 2026 TechCrunch Media LLC.

microsoft scout openclaw assistant techcrunch russell

Related Articles