Author archives

Ardi Janjeva is a Senior Research Associate at the Centre for Emerging Technology and Security (CETaS). His research interests are divided into three main areas: artificial intelligence innovation and disruption, intelligence tradecraft and investigatory powers, and emerging technology, political economy and strategy. He has worked closely with national and international partners across government, academia, civil society and the private sector on these topics, producing research which has been cited in academic journals and mainstream media outlets such as the Financial Times and the BBC. Prior to joining The Alan Turing Institute in July 2022, he worked as Research Fellow at the Royal United Services Institute (RUSI) where he formally established the institute’s Technology and National Security research programme. While at RUSI, he co-authored several high-impact research reports, including one of the most in-depth policy assessments of the uses of artificial intelligence in UK national security, and two reports written in collaboration with CETaS on the future of open-source intelligence in UK national security and the implications of privacy-enhancing technologies for UK surveillance policy. This research has been presented at national and international conferences and briefed to senior policymakers across government. Ardi holds an MSc in International Social and Public Policy from the London School of Economics and Political Science (LSE), achieving a Distinction in his thesis which analysed the British government’s post-riot narratives in the early 1980s in comparison with the 2011 England riots. He also achieved a first class Bachelor’s degree in Philosophy, Politics and Economics at King’s College London.

Agentic AI in the Wild: Lessons from Moltbook and OpenClaw

Tools like OpenClaw – the open-source AI agent that underpins Moltbook – are only possible because of the rapidly developing, and publicly available, capabilities of frontier large language models such as Anthropic’s Claude. Ardi Janjeva, Carolyn Ashurst and Rick Hennessy of the Alan Turing Institute discuss how the recent Moltbook frenzy illustrates the interaction between these capabilities and human behaviour is far from straightforward: users both deliberately and inadvertently behave in ways that significantly amplify the risks that applications like OpenClaw introduce.

Subjects: AI, KM, Legal Research