A reported open-source platform named NemoClaw would allow enterprises to dispatch digital agents to plan, reason and execute tasks for employees, expanding Nvidia’s ambitions beyond the chips powering the AI boo

Nvidia is planning to release an open source platform for artificial intelligence agents called “NemoClaw,” according to a report by Wired, a move that could expand the company’s growing push into software tools that allow businesses to deploy autonomous digital assistants.
The platform would allow companies to dispatch AI agents to perform tasks for employees, according to the report, which cited anonymous sources familiar with the effort. Nvidia has begun pitching the system to enterprise software companies and is seeking partnerships with Salesforce, Cisco, Google, Adobe and CrowdStrike, the report said. Nvidia and the potential partners did not immediately respond to requests for comment.
It remains unclear whether any partnerships have been finalized. Because the platform is expected to be open source, companies would likely receive free access, with early entry offered in exchange for contributing to the project, the sources told Wired.
The platform is expected to include built in security and privacy tools and would allow companies to use the system even if their products do not run on Nvidia chips, the report said.
The effort reflects Nvidia’s broader shift toward AI agents, software designed to carry out complex, multi step tasks by reasoning, planning and acting with limited human direction. In recent months the company has introduced foundational models meant to support such systems, including Nemotron and Cosmos.
Nvidia has also expanded its NeMo platform, which helps companies manage the entire lifecycle of AI agents, from preparing data and customizing models to monitoring and optimizing their performance.
Interest in AI agents has accelerated in recent months as developers experiment with tools that run locally on users’ computers and perform sequential tasks. One of the most widely discussed projects, OpenClaw, emerged earlier this year after first appearing under the names Clawdbot and Moltbot. OpenAI later acquired the project and hired its creator.
Nvidia’s chief executive, Jensen Huang, recently described OpenClaw as “the most important software release probably ever.”
But researchers have warned that early versions of such tools could introduce security risks, particularly for large companies that might rely on them to carry out sensitive or complex operations.
The reported plans come as Nvidia prepares for its annual developer conference in San Jose next week, where the company is expected to unveil updates to its artificial intelligence hardware and software strategy.
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