China's AI Platform Crackdowns Renew Case for Local Agent Deployment
China's major AI platforms Doubao and Qwen tightened restrictions on third-party agents last week, delisting or throttling distribution of tools that developers had spent months building. The move follows a well-established pattern seen across platforms like Twitter, OpenAI's GPT store, and Slack, where ecosystems are opened to developers early and later restricted once platforms identify what users want. Unlike traditional SaaS products, cloud-based AI agents are especially difficult to migrate because their value lies in prompt engineering, tool integrations, and model-specific tuning that cannot simply be exported. This has accelerated interest in local and on-device AI deployment, where developers retain full control over models, data, and infrastructure without risk of remote shutdowns. The author's own project, Mano-P, is cited as an example of a locally run GUI agent built on Apple Silicon to avoid dependence on cloud platform policies.
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