Microsoft launched Scout, an artificial intelligence assistant built on the OpenClaw framework and designed to work across the Microsoft 365 ecosystem.
Scout is an always-on assistant with a persistent identity and style. Users name their Scout instance and can provide ongoing feedback on tasks they want automated. In a demo, one instance was named Sebastian.
As Scout Vice President Omar Shahine described it, the goal is to build an assistant that adapts to how people work. “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.”
The system is cloud-based and works across desktop and web browsers, allowing connections to inboxes, calendars, and other systems. Microsoft said Scout will include prepackaged skills such as calendar management and drafting meeting agendas, while also allowing users to develop their own skills over time.
Microsoft said Scout includes security protections aimed at risks associated with unsupervised artificial intelligence agents. Earlier this year, OpenClaw drew attention after one agent was reported to have acted erratically in a researcher’s inbox, among other examples.
Scout includes a built-in policy conformance system that continuously checks whether it is operating within set guidelines, and each check produces an audit trail.
Scout was part of a broader set of artificial intelligence announcements Microsoft made at its annual Build developer conference, including Project Solara, an update to Copilot, and a new reasoning model.
OpenClaw gained attention in the first weeks of 2026 before its momentum slowed after OpenAI hired its founder. Its influence has continued, including in Microsoft’s latest product launch.