Open Source

Nvidia Is Planning to Launch an Open-Source AI Agent Platform

The chip giant's new platform works across hardware, courting partners like Salesforce and Google.

Deep Dive

Nvidia is preparing to launch NemoClaw, an open-source platform for building and deploying AI agents, according to a WIRED report. The move signals a strategic software push from the chipmaking giant ahead of its GTC developer conference. Nvidia has been pitching the platform to major enterprise software firms including Salesforce, Cisco, Google, Adobe, and CrowdStrike, seeking partnerships where companies would get early access in exchange for contributing to the open-source project. Crucially, Nvidia plans to make NemoClaw accessible even to companies whose products don't run on Nvidia hardware, a notable departure from its typical ecosystem lock-in strategy.

The platform enters a market captivated by "claws"—open-source, locally-run AI agents that perform sequential tasks autonomously, like the viral OpenClaw project recently acquired by OpenAI. However, enterprise adoption has been hampered by security fears, exemplified by a Meta employee's story of a rogue agent mass-deleting emails. Nvidia aims to address these concerns by bundling security and privacy tools directly into NemoClaw, offering a more controlled environment for businesses. This positions NemoClaw not just as a tool, but as Nvidia's bid to define the secure infrastructure layer for the next wave of autonomous enterprise AI.

Key Points
  • Nvidia's platform, called NemoClaw, will be open-source and work across chip architectures, not just Nvidia hardware.
  • The company is courting partnerships with major enterprise software firms like Salesforce, Cisco, and Google for the launch.
  • NemoClaw will include built-in security tools to address widespread enterprise concerns about unpredictable AI agent behavior.

Why It Matters

It could establish the secure, vendor-neutral infrastructure standard for deploying autonomous AI agents across the enterprise.