Browser Awareness
ClawPaw understands what you are currently viewing in your active browser tab. You do not need to copy URLs, describe the page, or explain which site you are on. When invoked, ClawPaw reads contextual information directly from the foreground tab and uses it as part of its reasoning process.
This allows you to work naturally. If you are researching, reading documentation, reviewing dashboards, or browsing structured data, ClawPaw can incorporate that context into its plan without requiring manual input.
Browser awareness is session-based and invocation-based. It is not passive monitoring.
What ClawPaw Can Do
When you ask for assistance while on a webpage, ClawPaw can:
- Summarize visible content
- Extract structured information
- Cross-reference browser content with local files
- Generate plans based on current page context
- Use page data as input for task execution
Because ClawPaw operates at the OS level, it reads the actual foreground environment rather than relying on pasted links.
How Context Is Handled
ClawPaw only reads browser context when:
- You explicitly invoke it
- The browser tab is in the foreground
- The task requires contextual interpretation
It does not:
- Monitor background tabs
- Record browsing history
- Track activity over time
- Sync browsing data externally
Context is derived locally and used transiently to complete the requested task.
Why This Matters
Many agent systems depend on API integrations or manual link sharing to reconstruct browser state. ClawPaw reduces that friction by operating directly within your working environment.
You remain in control of:
- When browser context is accessed
- What permissions are granted
- How actions are executed
OS-level awareness simplifies interaction without expanding surveillance.
