Nvidia CEO Jensen Huang delivers the keynote address at the GTC AI Conference in San Jose, California, on March 18, 2025.
Josh Edelson | Afp | Getty Images
Nvidia is set to introduce an open-source platform for artificial intelligence agents named ‘NemoClaw.’ This development is in line with the increasing demand for AI tools, as reported by Wired on Tuesday.
Citing anonymous sources close to the situation, the report highlighted that Nvidia has begun reaching out to enterprise software firms to establish partnerships with notable names like Salesforce, Cisco, Google, Adobe, and CrowdStrike.
Nvidia and its prospective partners have not yet issued a statement regarding this initiative.
The specifics of any official partnerships remain uncertain. Reports suggest that because the platform will be open source, these partners may have complimentary access, with early participation contingent upon their contributions to the project.
The NemoClaw platform is designed to enable companies to deploy AI agents for various tasks, which will also feature tools for enhanced security and privacy.
Moreover, access to the platform will not be restricted to businesses using Nvidia’s chips.
As the industry moves from large language models to more focused tools that can autonomously reason, plan, and carry out complex tasks, Nvidia is increasingly investing in AI agents.
In recent months, the company has unveiled foundational models intended to drive AI agents, including Nemotron and Cosmos.
Additionally, Nvidia has broadened its ‘NeMo’ platform, assisting clients in managing the entire lifecycle of AI agents—from data collection and customization to monitoring and refinement.
The rising interest in AI agents parallels the adoption of “claws”—open-source AI tools that operate locally on personal machines to execute sequential tasks.
OpenClaw, originally known as Clawdbot and later renamed Moltbot, gained significant attention at the beginning of the year. The project was eventually acquired by OpenAI, which brought its creator on board.
Despite the excitement, experts have pointed out various security concerns associated with the early-stage AI tools from OpenClaw, particularly for enterprise clients—exactly the audience Nvidia is targeting with NemoClaw.
This announcement precedes Nvidia’s annual developer conference in San Jose, where further details about the company’s hardware and software initiatives are anticipated.
— Explore more about NemoClaw in Wired’s report.