WIRED reports that NVIDIA is preparing to launch an open source AI agent platform called NemoClaw as it expands into enterprise AI infrastructure.
The platform is being pitched to enterprise software companies, allowing organizations to deploy AI agents that can perform tasks for internal employees. The system will work regardless of whether the company’s software runs on Nvidia chips, sources told WIRED.
The move comes ahead of NVIDIA’s annual developer conference in San Jose next week. Nvidia has reportedly approached companies including Salesforce, Cisco, Google, Adobe, and CrowdStrike about possible collaborations on its agent platform.
Partners will receive early access to the open source system in exchange for their development contributions, officials said. Nvidia is also expected to integrate security and privacy tools aimed at making AI agents more secure in enterprise environments.
Interest in autonomous AI agents has skyrocketed in recent months. These systems, often referred to as claws, are designed to perform multi-step tasks with limited human supervision and can run locally on personal machines or within corporate workflows.
Earlier this year, an autonomous agent project known as OpenClaw gained attention in Silicon Valley for its ability to run independently and complete work tasks on personal computers. OpenAI then hired the project’s creators and began open sourcing the technology.
This push also comes as Nvidia continues to expand across its AI ecosystem. Today, the company announced a partnership with AI research startup Thinking Machines Lab, further deepening its involvement with AI developers.
Nvidia is also expected to announce new inference hardware at the developer conference, including a system that incorporates a chip designed by AI startup Groq as part of a multibillion-dollar licensing deal.
Disclosure: This article was edited by Estefano Gómez. Please see our Editorial Policy for more information on how we create and review content.

