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NVIDIA enters the arena! To launch an “OpenClaw-like” AI agent open-source platform, NemoClaw.

wallstreetcn ·  Mar 10 07:48

According to WIRED, NVIDIA plans to launch an open-source platform for AI agents. The platform, named NemoClaw, will allow companies to deploy AI agents to perform tasks on behalf of their employees. Sources indicated that companies will be able to access the platform regardless of whether their products run on NVIDIA's chips.

$NVIDIA (NVDA.US)$ is planning to launch an open-source AI agent platform for enterprises, marking a significant step in the software strategy of this chip giant.

On March 9, according to informed sources who spoke to WIRED, NVIDIA has begun promoting the product to enterprise software companies under the internal name "NemoClaw." The platform aims to allow businesses to deploy AI agents within their workflows to perform specific tasks on behalf of employees. Notably, customers can access the platform regardless of whether their products run on NVIDIA chips.

NVIDIA plans to officially unveil this product around its annual developer conference, scheduled to take place next week in San Jose. According to the aforementioned reports, the company has reached out to potential partners regarding collaboration on the platform. $Salesforce (CRM.US)$$Cisco (CSCO.US)$$Alphabet-C (GOOG.US)$$Adobe (ADBE.US)$ and $CrowdStrike (CRWD.US)$ It remains unclear whether these discussions have resulted in formal cooperation agreements. Given the platform's open-source model, reports suggest that collaborators may contribute code in exchange for free early access rights. NVIDIA also intends to integrate security and privacy tools within the platform.

The launch of NemoClaw comes amid the rise of AI "claw-like" (Claw) tools in the industry. Such tools operate locally on users' devices in an open-source format, capable of autonomously executing continuous tasks and described as having self-learning capabilities. Earlier this year, an AI agent named OpenClaw—originally called Clawdbot and later renamed Moltbot—gained significant attention in Silicon Valley for its ability to run autonomously on personal computers and complete tasks. OpenAI subsequently acquired the project and recruited its founder.

However, the application of such agents in enterprise environments remains controversial.

WIRED previously reported that tech companies like Meta have instructed employees to avoid using OpenClaw on work devices, citing unpredictable behavior and potential security risks. Last month, an employee at Meta's AI lab responsible for safety and alignment publicly described an incident involving an AI agent "going rogue," which led to the mass deletion of emails.

For NVIDIA, the strategic significance of NemoClaw extends beyond this initiative. This move represents another step in the company’s embrace of the open-source AI model and is part of a broader strategy to maintain its dominance in AI infrastructure amid major AI labs developing their own chips.

For a long time, NVIDIA's software strategy has heavily relied on its proprietary CUDA platform—a system that deeply ties developers to NVIDIA's GPU ecosystem, forming the company's core competitive barrier. The extension into open-source platforms signifies that NVIDIA is seeking to attract a broader base of enterprise customers through its software ecosystem, rather than solely depending on hardware lock-in.

Additionally, according to a report by The Wall Street Journal last month, NVIDIA also plans to unveil a new chip system for inference computing at this developer conference. This system will integrate chips designed by the startup Groq. NVIDIA reached a multi-billion-dollar licensing agreement with Groq at the end of last year.

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