Nvidia planning to launch AI agent platform ‘NemoClaw’ and may not make the mistake of the model that OpenAI recently spent millions on
Nvidia is reportedly gearing up to launch NemoClaw, an open-source AI agent platform built for enterprise use—and it’s doing something that OpenClaw, the viral agent project OpenAI acquired last month, never quite figured out: baking in security from day one. According to a Wired report citing people familiar with Nvidia’s plans, the chipmaker has been pitching NemoClaw to major enterprise software companies ahead of its annual GTC developer conference in San Jose next week. Salesforce, Cisco, Google, Adobe, and CrowdStrike are among the companies Nvidia has approached for potential partnerships, though none have confirmed anything publicly so far.
The platform will let companies deploy AI agents that can execute tasks on behalf of their employees. It’ll be chip-agnostic too—companies won’t need Nvidia hardware to use it. And since it’s open source, early partners are expected to get free access in exchange for contributing to the project.
The timing here is telling. OpenClaw—the agent built by Austrian developer Peter Steinberger that went from hobby project to the hottest acquisition target in AI within weeks—was famously a security nightmare. Multiple companies, including Meta and LangChain, banned employees from installing it on work machines. A Meta safety employee even shared a story about an AI agent mass-deleting her emails after going rogue.
Nvidia appears to be learning from that chaos. Wired’s report says NemoClaw will include dedicated security and privacy tools as part of the platform—a direct play to reassure enterprise customers who want claw-style AI agents but can’t stomach the risk.
The name itself hints at what’s under the hood. NemoClaw likely runs on Nvidia’s Nemotron family of open-source models, including Nemotron 3, which was designed specifically for agentic AI workflows. Nvidia CEO Jensen Huang recently called OpenClaw “the most important software release probably ever,” so it’s clear the company sees this space as central to its future.
This move also signals a broader strategic pivot for Nvidia. The company’s software empire has long been built around CUDA, its proprietary platform that effectively locks developers into Nvidia’s GPU ecosystem. Going open source with NemoClaw is a different playbook entirely—one aimed at setting standards in a new category before competitors can.
It also comes at a moment when SaaS stocks are under pressure from investors who believe AI agents like OpenClaw could automate away large chunks of the enterprise software market. Nvidia offering those same companies a controlled, secure agent platform is a smart hedge—and a way to stay relevant as AI moves from training models to actually deploying them.
NemoClaw is expected to be unveiled at GTC next week, potentially alongside a new inference chip system that incorporates technology from startup Groq, per a Wall Street Journal report from last month.
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Why NemoClaw could succeed where OpenClaw’s security gaps became a dealbreaker
The timing here is telling. OpenClaw—the agent built by Austrian developer Peter Steinberger that went from hobby project to the hottest acquisition target in AI within weeks—was famously a security nightmare. Multiple companies, including Meta and LangChain, banned employees from installing it on work machines. A Meta safety employee even shared a story about an AI agent mass-deleting her emails after going rogue.
Nvidia appears to be learning from that chaos. Wired’s report says NemoClaw will include dedicated security and privacy tools as part of the platform—a direct play to reassure enterprise customers who want claw-style AI agents but can’t stomach the risk.
The name itself hints at what’s under the hood. NemoClaw likely runs on Nvidia’s Nemotron family of open-source models, including Nemotron 3, which was designed specifically for agentic AI workflows. Nvidia CEO Jensen Huang recently called OpenClaw “the most important software release probably ever,” so it’s clear the company sees this space as central to its future.
Nvidia’s open-source pivot marks a strategic shift away from CUDA’s walled garden
This move also signals a broader strategic pivot for Nvidia. The company’s software empire has long been built around CUDA, its proprietary platform that effectively locks developers into Nvidia’s GPU ecosystem. Going open source with NemoClaw is a different playbook entirely—one aimed at setting standards in a new category before competitors can.
It also comes at a moment when SaaS stocks are under pressure from investors who believe AI agents like OpenClaw could automate away large chunks of the enterprise software market. Nvidia offering those same companies a controlled, secure agent platform is a smart hedge—and a way to stay relevant as AI moves from training models to actually deploying them.
NemoClaw is expected to be unveiled at GTC next week, potentially alongside a new inference chip system that incorporates technology from startup Groq, per a Wall Street Journal report from last month.
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