Nvidia CEO Jensen Huang delivers the keynote speech at the GTC AI Conference on March 18, 2025 in San Jose, California.
Josh Edelson | AFP | Getty Images
Nvidia is planning to capitalize on the growing popularity of AI tools by launching an open source platform for artificial intelligence agents called NemoClaw, Wired reported on Tuesday.
The report, citing unnamed sources familiar with the matter, said Nvidia has begun marketing the product to enterprise software companies and is looking to partner with them. sales force, Cisco, google, adobeand cloud strike.
Nvidia and its potential partners did not immediately respond to requests for comment.
It remains unclear whether an official partnership has been finalized. The platform is expected to be open source, so partners will be granted early access in exchange for contributing to the project, and will likely be free to use, sources told Wired.
The platform will allow these companies to deploy AI agents to perform tasks on behalf of their employees, and will include security and privacy tools, according to the report.
Companies will be able to access the platform regardless of whether their products run on Nvidia’s chips, it added.
Nvidia is starting to invest more resources into AI agents as companies move away from large language models to more specialized tools that can independently reason, plan, and execute complex multi-step tasks.
For example, in recent months the company has released a basic model designed to power AI agents such as Nemotron and Cosmos.
We also expanded our “NeMo” platform, which allows clients to manage the entire lifecycle of their AI agents, from data curation and customization to monitoring and optimization.
Nvidia’s interest in agents also comes as people are increasingly embracing so-called “claws,” open-source AI tools that run locally on users’ machines and perform sequential tasks.
Such AI agents were made famous by OpenClaw (first called Clawdbot and then Moltbot), which debuted earlier this year. OpenAI eventually acquired the project and hired its creator.
But experts have pointed to a number of security risks associated with OpenClaw’s early AI tools, particularly the enterprise customers that Nvidia is reportedly targeting with its AI agent platform.
The move comes as Nvidia prepares for its annual developer conference in San Jose next week, which is expected to include announcements and roadmaps for the company’s hardware and software products.
— For more information on Nvidia’s NemoClaw plans, check out Wired’s report.
