Trending on Hacker News right now: an open-source desktop AI assistant that runs entirely locally. No cloud uploads. No telemetry. No vendor lock-in.
It's called OpenYak, and it might be the most interesting free AI tool I've seen this month.
Most AI tools send your data to the cloud. All of it. Your conversations, your files, your prompts — sitting on someone else's server.
OpenYak flips that model. Everything stays on your machine. Your data never leaves your laptop. That's not a feature — it's the default.
The free tier is surprisingly generous:
That's not a "free trial." That's a real free tier with actual utility.
This isn't a chatbot. It's a productivity machine:
Seven agent modes. Long-term memory. MCP connectors for external tools. This thing was built to actually get work done.
OpenYak integrates with OpenClaw for messaging — which means your AI assistant can receive and reply across all your channels from one place. If you're already in the OpenClaw ecosystem, this is a natural fit.
It's essentially a self-hosted version of what enterprise AI assistants charge $30-50/user/month for — except it's free and open source.
There isn't one. It's AGPL-3.0 licensed. You can inspect the code, contribute, or fork it. Premium models cost money through OpenRouter, but there's zero markup — you pay provider prices directly.
If you want to go fully offline, Ollama support means you can run local models with zero internet dependency.
Indie hackers who want AI without the subscriptions stacking up.
Privacy-conscious builders who don't trust cloud AI with client data.
Developers who want a local-first AI that integrates with their existing workflow.
Anyone tired of SaaS pricing — this replaces 3-4 separate AI subscriptions.
GitHub: OpenYak Desktop — free download for Windows and macOS.
1M free tokens/week. 100+ models. Zero cloud uploads. Open source.