
Share
Just days after launching its 24/7 Agent on Telegram, Manus AI faced a setback when the platform suspended the service, raising questions about the future of constant availability for AI assistants.
Manus AI recently introduced a new feature called "Agents" across its web app and mobile clients. This move aims to provide users with a personal assistant that has a distinct identity, persistent memory, and support for custom skills. However, the launch hit an unexpected snag when Telegram suspended Manus AI’s always-on agent account shortly after it went live.
Manus AI's "Agents" feature is designed to simplify the process of setting up and using a personal assistant. Here are the key technical details:
The onboarding process is streamlined to reduce friction:
This approach addresses several pain points in the current landscape of personal assistants:

One practical constraint is the cost. Manus AI uses a credit-based system, where users are charged for each interaction or task performed by the agent. Agent-style workflows, which encourage longer and more frequent sessions, can quickly burn through credits. Therefore, transparent pricing and credit management will be crucial for user adoption.
This launch comes amid broader competitive signals in the AI assistant market. For example, Meta has been testing integrations with OpenClaw, another proactive agent stack. Manus AI’s approach of providing a near one-click setup could give it an edge in attracting both power users and mainstream subscribers who are looking for a hassle-free experience.
Shortly after the launch, Telegram suspended Manus AI’s always-on agent account. Neither Telegram nor Meta has issued any public statement regarding this suspension. The exact reasons behind the suspension are unclear, but it has forced Manus AI to explore alternative messaging platforms.
A tweet from TestingCatalog News suggests that WhatsApp might become the next platform for Manus AI’s expansion:
Looks like WhatsApp will be the only way for Manus AI to expand.
I bet we will see it very very soon. It deserves a war room to be on fire already. pic.twitter.com/1L8pWZu5JG
, TestingCatalog News 🗞 (@testingcatalog) February 14, 2026
Manus AI’s new "Agents" feature represents a significant step forward in simplifying the setup and use of personal assistants. However, the suspension by Telegram highlights the challenges of navigating platform policies. As Manus AI looks to expand on other platforms like WhatsApp, it will need to balance user convenience with cost management and platform compliance.
Tags
Original Sources
About the author
Kai built ML infrastructure at a Bay Area startup before developing an obsession with transformer architectures and inference optimisation that eventually pulled him out of product work entirely. A stint at a compute research lab sharpened his instinct for what actually matters in a model release versus what is marketing. He writes from the inside — from the perspective of someone who has debugged the systems he is describing at three in the morning. He is allergic to hype and instinctively drawn to the unglamorous plumbing questions that everyone else skips over.
More from The Engineer →This Week's Edition
16 February 2026
133 articles
Related Articles

Smarter Engagement for Stronger Growth: How Payers Can Leverage AI to Do More with Less
Products & Applications · 3 min

Penn Medicine and K Health Deploy AI Clinical Agents to Enhance Patient Care
Products & Applications · 3 min

Wheel and b.well Partner to Build Turnkey AI-First Virtual Care Infrastructure
Products & Applications · 3 min
Related Articles

Smarter Engagement for Stronger Growth: How Payers Can Leverage AI to Do More with Less
Products & Applications · 3 min

Penn Medicine and K Health Deploy AI Clinical Agents to Enhance Patient Care
Products & Applications · 3 min

Wheel and b.well Partner to Build Turnkey AI-First Virtual Care Infrastructure
Products & Applications · 3 min
More Stories