AI tool comparison
QwenPaw vs QwenPaw
Which one should you ship with? Here is the side-by-side panel verdict, pricing read, reviewer split, and community vote comparison.
AI Assistants
QwenPaw
Alibaba's open-source personal assistant that runs on your machine across every chat app
50%
Panel ship
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Community
Paid
Entry
QwenPaw (formerly CoPaw/Tongyi CoPaw) is an open-source personal AI assistant from Alibaba's AgentScope team that rebounded in April 2026 with a v1.1 series of releases and a full ecosystem rebrand. It runs locally on your machine or in the cloud, connects to every major chat platform (DingTalk, Feishu, QQ, Discord, iMessage, and more), and executes scheduled tasks, agentic workflows, and memory-based recall — all from a unified interface. The v1.1.3 and v1.1.4 releases in April brought a backup and restore system, QwenPaw as ACP Server (allowing other agents to call into it), proactive agent messaging, a console plugin system, agent statistics, and a shell evasion guard. The rebrand to QwenPaw signals deeper integration with Alibaba's Qwen model ecosystem, meaning you get native access to Qwen 3 and Qwen 3.5 series models out of the box. The appeal is data sovereignty: everything runs on your infrastructure, conversations stay on your machines, and you configure which channels it monitors. For teams already embedded in Alibaba's cloud stack, this is a natural fit. For everyone else, it's an intriguing open-source alternative to commercial personal assistant platforms — if you're willing to self-host.
Personal AI
QwenPaw
Self-hosted personal AI assistant that runs in your own environment
75%
Panel ship
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Community
Free
Entry
QwenPaw (formerly CoPaw) is an open-source personal AI assistant you run on your own machine or cloud server. It connects to multiple chat platforms — Discord, DingTalk, Feishu, QQ, iMessage — and handles scheduled tasks, custom skills, and document processing all from a single local process. Nothing leaves your infrastructure. The April 22 v1.1.3 release added a Backup & Restore system, the ability to run QwenPaw as an ACP (Agent Communication Protocol) server, proactive agent messaging, a Console Plugin System, and a Shell Evasion Guard for security. It's built on the AgentScope framework and is now deeply integrated with the Qwen open-source model ecosystem, including local model support. QwenPaw sits in a sweet spot between consumer AI apps (which own your data) and raw agent frameworks (which require heavy engineering). The skills system makes it extensible without requiring code changes for each new capability — built-in skills handle PDF/Office files, news digests, and cron jobs, with custom skills easily added.
Reviewer scorecard
“The ACP Server capability in v1.1.3 is genuinely interesting — being able to call QwenPaw from other agents creates an orchestration layer you can build on. The multi-channel support is real and well-implemented. If you're in the Alibaba / Qwen ecosystem already, this is a no-brainer deploy.”
“The ACP server mode in v1.1.3 is underrated — it means QwenPaw can act as an agent backend for other tools. Apache 2.0 license, multi-channel support, and local Qwen model integration make this a genuinely solid self-hosted assistant stack.”
“The China-ecosystem platforms (DingTalk, Feishu, QQ) are the primary channels, which narrows the appeal significantly for Western teams. The rebrand from CoPaw to QwenPaw is the third name in two years — signs of product identity confusion. Self-hosting requirements also raise the bar considerably.”
“The Qwen branding pivot is a bit of a red flag — it suggests this is now more of a Alibaba/Qwen showcase than a truly independent project. The multi-channel support sounds good but each integration adds surface area for breakage when APIs change.”
“Personal AI assistants that you fully own, run locally, and connect to every communication channel you already use — this is where the market is heading. QwenPaw is one of the most complete implementations of this vision available as open source today.”
“Local-first AI assistants that run across all your communication channels are the next wave of personal productivity. QwenPaw's Shell Evasion Guard and offline-capable architecture show the team understands that security and privacy are table stakes for self-hosted agents.”
“The interface is very developer-facing and the supported channels are enterprise-centric Asian platforms I don't use. The concept is great — a personal assistant you fully own — but the execution doesn't feel polished enough for non-technical creative workflows yet.”
“Having your AI assistant available in Discord, iMessage, AND DingTalk from one local setup is genuinely useful. The proactive messaging feature means it can push you reminders and digests without you having to ask — that's where personal assistants actually earn their keep.”
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