OpenClaw channels
Build an OpenClaw Telegram or WhatsApp AI agent safely
This tutorial shows how to think about OpenClaw channel setup, Telegram-first testing, WhatsApp rollout, model provider connection, safety approvals and real-world monitoring.
The safe channel rollout plan
Do not connect every channel immediately. Start with a test channel, prove the agent can answer safely, log results, then connect a public channel only after the behavior is predictable.
1. Telegram test
Use Telegram as the first sandbox because it is easier to test, reset and keep private.
2. Human review
Review replies before the agent handles important users, sales, support or operational messages.
3. WhatsApp rollout
Only add WhatsApp after prompt rules, logs, rate limits and fallback behavior are clear.
Concrete setup checklist
Deploy OpenClaw first
Use Hostinger 1-Click OpenClaw or VPS install. Confirm the dashboard loads over HTTPS before adding channels.
Add one model provider
Connect only one model provider at first. Send 5–10 test prompts and check quality, latency and cost.
Connect Telegram privately
Create a small private test bot/channel. Send basic questions, unclear questions and edge cases. Confirm the agent refuses actions it should not take.
Write channel rules
Define what the agent can answer, when it must escalate to a human, what data it must not request, and what it should do when unsure.
Move to WhatsApp slowly
After Telegram works, connect WhatsApp with limited scope. Start with FAQ-style replies or draft suggestions before allowing direct customer interaction.

Video reference
Watch an OpenClaw setup walkthrough
Use the video for visual orientation, then verify the final setup steps with current Hostinger support documentation.
Watch on YouTubeVerified resource links
GPUJet rule: channel access is power
A messaging agent can influence users directly. Start private, test carefully, require escalation rules and monitor every public rollout.
