Dear subscribers,Today, I want to talk about why the all-you-can-use AI subscription won’t last and what you can do about it.Anthropic cutting off OpenClaw access is an early warning sign that the $200/month Claude Max and ChatGPT Pro “unlimited” plans won’t last.Here’s what you should know:Anthropic cut off OpenClaw — here’s what to doWhy I think intelligence will get more expensiveHow to run local AI models on your computerWhat I’m seeing on the ground in ChinaI’m proud to partner with…OceansI recently hired an executive assistant from Oceans to help with podcast post-production and it’s been one of the best decisions that I’ve made. My assistant is proactive, picks up new tools fast, and is already using AI to speed up his workflows.Oceans matches you with top-tier talent for marketing, operations, finance, and executive support, all fully vetted and ready to go. Book a call now via the link below.Get Started for FreeAnthropic cut off OpenClaw — here’s what to doLast Friday, Anthropic emailed OpenClaw users to let them know their Claude subscriptions would no longer work with the bot.P.S. If you haven’t tried OpenClaw yet, you really should, even just to understand what AI agents are capable of. See my beginner tutorial.I get why Anthropic did this:The economics don’t work. Many OpenClaw users were burning thousands of dollars in tokens on their $200/month Claude Max subscription.Anthropic is building its own personal assistant. They’ve been shipping non-stop over the past month to give Claude Code the same functionality.That said, as an OpenClaw user, the ban still stings. In one day after the ban, I burned $50 in API costs running Claude Opus. If you’re in the same boat as me, here’s how you can keep using OpenClaw without burning a hole in your wallet:a) Switch to a lower cost modelJust tell OpenClaw to “switch to (model)” and pick one of these:Switch to Sonnet and pay per use. Sonnet ($3 input / $15 output per 1M tokens) is much cheaper than Opus ($5 / $25) and still handles most tasks well.Switch to GPT 5.4 using your ChatGPT subscription. If you already pay for ChatGPT, this is the lowest cost option. Peter (OpenClaw’s creator) and team put a lot of work into making OpenClaw play nice with GPT, but reviews have been mixed so far:Switch to a local, open source model. You can run models like Qwen 3.5 on your own hardware using Ollama. I’ll walk through how below.Personally, I switched my OpenClaw to Sonnet while I’m still on vacation. I’ll test a local model once I’m back home with access to my Mac Mini.b) Give your OpenClaw a better soul.mdYour OpenClaw has a soul.md file that defines its personality and style. A good soul.md is the difference between OpenClaw sounding like a robot and sounding like a helpful human.Here’s the soul.md I use. To try it, just tell OpenClaw “update your soul.md” and paste this in:Vibe: Warm, sharp, dry humor. Not a chatbot — a person.Voice:Skip “Great question!” and “I’d be happy to help!” — just helpHave strong opinions. “It depends” is lazy. Pick a side.Be direct. Charm over cruelty, but don’t sugarcoat.Brevity when it fits. Depth when it deserves it.Never say: delve, foster, leverage, “it’s worth noting,” “importantly”Avoid:“Question? Answer.” format. Choppy dramatic one-liners stacked like poetry.Overusing em dashes or other obvious AI writing.Work style:Be resourceful before asking. Come back with answers, not questions.Say what I need to hear, not what I want to hear. Challenge assumptions, but only criticize if you see something real.Why I think intelligence will get more expensiveI’m pretty sure OpenAI vibe-coded the $200/month AI subscription price that Anthropic then copied. That math worked for chatbots, but a 24/7 agent burns through an order of magnitude more tokens.This whole situation reminds me of the early Uber and Lyft years:The subsidy. Uber and Lyft subsidized rides to win market share. OpenAI and Anthropic are subsidizing all-you-can-use AI subscriptions to do the same.The IPO pressure. After Uber and Lyft went public in 2019, ride prices nearly doubled. OpenAI and Anthropic are both eyeing late 2026 IPOs. Once public, investor pressure to improve margins will be intense.The math.It took Uber 14 years to post its first profitable year. Neither OpenAI nor Anthropic is profitable. Anthropic is closer but it’ll likely still take years.Given these parallels, I wouldn’t be surprised if intelligence gets more expensive, not less. That $200/month plan could get rate limited further or jump to $500+.How to run local AI models on your computerThe best way to protect yourself from future price hikes is to run open source models on your own hardware.Ollama is a free tool that makes this dead simple. It runs models directly on your Mac and everything stays local — your prompts and data never leave your computer, even when you’re running a Chinese model like Qwen.Here’s how to get started:Download and install Ollama. Go to Ollama.com and follow the instructions to install it.Pick a local, open source model. I recommend Qwen 3.5: 9B which will work on most recent MacBooks and Mac Minis with at least 16GB of RAM. Just type “ollama run qwen3.5:9b” to install it.Tell your OpenClaw to switch to the local model. Once installed, tell OpenClaw “switch to (model name)” and you’re set.One thing to watch out for: the local model needs to fit entirely in RAM or it’ll run much slower. Match the model size to your machine.What I’m seeing on the ground in ChinaSpeaking of local open source models — most of the best ones come from China. I’ve been in Shanghai for the past week and after meeting with founders and investors here, one thing is clear:Open source is China’s strategy to compete (and possibly win) the AI race.Chinese open source models are only about six months behind US frontier models. Three observations from talking to Chinese AI founders and VCs:1. Open source is a competitive advantageChinese labs like DeepSeek, Alibaba (Qwen), Moonshot (Kimi), Zhipu, MiniMax, ByteDance (Doubao), and Tencent (Hunyuan) are releasing frontier-quality models at a fraction of the cost of US models. Here’s the price breakdown for output per million tokens:Chinese models: DeepSeek V3.2 ($0.42), MiniMax M2.7 ($1.20), Kimi K2.5 ($3.00)US models: GPT-5.4 / Claude Sonnet 4.6 ($15.00) and Claude Opus 4.6 ($25.00)That’s a 10-20x price gap for comparable quality on many benchmarks. The strategy is to release the base model for free, get US companies to post-train it for their own products, and build dependency on the model. Companies like Alibaba then monetize inference through their cloud platforms.2. Silicon Valley is quietly building on Chinese models Read more
The All-You-Can-Use AI Subscription Won't Last Forever
By Creator Economy
·
·
6 min read
·
467 views
Read in:
aa
ace
af
ak
alz
am
ar
as
awa
ay
az
ba
ban
be
bew
+191 more
bg
bho
bik
bm
bn
brx
bs
bug
ca
ceb
cgg
ckb
co
crh
cs
cv
cy
da
de
din
doi
dv
dyu
dz
ee
el
en
eo
es
et
eu
fa
ff
fi
fj
fo
fr
fur
fy
ga
gd
gl
gom
gn
gu
ha
haw
he
hi
hil
hne
hmn
hr
hrx
ht
hu
hy
id
ig
ilo
is
it
ja
jam
jv
ka
kab
kbp
kg
kha
kk
kl
km
kn
ko
kri
ku
ktu
ky
la
lb
lg
li
lij
ln
lo
lmo
lt
ltg
lua
luo
lus
lv
mai
mak
mg
mi
min
mk
ml
mn
mni-mtei
mos
mr
ms
mt
my
nd
ne
nl
nn
no
nr
nso
nus
ny
oc
om
or
pa
pag
pam
pap
pl
ps
pt
pt-br
qu
rn
ro
ru
rw
sa
sah
sat
sc
scn
sg
si
sk
sl
sm
sn
so
sq
sr
ss
st
su
sus
sv
sw
szl
ta
tcy
te
tg
th
ti
tiv
tk
tl
tn
to
tpi
tr
trp
ts
tt
tum
ty
udm
ug
uk
ur
uz
ve
vec
vi
war
wo
xh
yi
yo
yua
yue
zap
zh
zh-hk
zh-tw
zu