Nvidia plans open-source AI agent platform ‘NemoClaw’ for enterprises

Nvidia is reportedly developing an open-source AI agent platform called NemoClaw aimed at enterprise users seeking secure and privacy-focused automation tools.

The move comes as interest in autonomous AI agents grows globally.

Reports suggest the company has begun recommending the platform to software firms and is exploring partnerships with companies including CrowdStrike, Adobe, Cisco, and Google, though it remains unclear whether any agreements have been finalised.

NemoClaw is expected to be an enterprise-grade AI agent platform designed to provide strong security and privacy protections while enabling scalable automation of tasks. The system is said to integrate deeply with Nvidia’s NeMo framework, the Nemotron model series, and Nvidia Inference Microservices.

Reports indicate the platform will be hardware-agnostic, meaning it can run on devices powered by Nvidia, Intel, AMD, or other processors. Companies will be able to deploy AI agents capable of performing tasks for employees while maintaining enterprise-level security and compliance standards.

The development comes amid growing attention around OpenClaw, a community-driven AI assistant launched by software developer Peter Steinberger in November last year. OpenClaw allows users to run AI agents locally to automate writing, coding, and other tasks.

Last month, OpenClaw was acquired by OpenAI, creating space for other platforms focused on secure and independently governed AI agents. While many companies have launched specialised agents, NemoClaw is expected to target enterprises that require flexible open-source systems combined with strong security features.

Reports suggest the platform’s capabilities may include enterprise-grade security and privacy tools, deep customisation through open-source architecture, task automation and agent distribution, along with integration across Nvidia’s broader AI ecosystem.

Nvidia has been investing heavily in AI agents as businesses increasingly adopt specialised tools powered by large language models. The company recently introduced foundational models such as Nemotron and Cosmos that could support autonomous AI systems.

In a recent interview, Nvidia chief executive Jensen Huang said OpenClaw was “one of the most important software releases, probably ever”.

Interest in the technology is also rising in China, where startups are rapidly developing products and services based on OpenClaw. However, security experts have raised concerns about potential risks associated with deploying autonomous AI agents in enterprise environments.

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