TLDR
- Nvidia is building an open-source AI agent platform called NemoClaw, aimed at enterprise customers
- The platform lets companies deploy AI agents to handle employee workflow tasks
- Nvidia has pitched NemoClaw to Salesforce, Cisco, Google, Adobe, and CrowdStrike
- Partners would get early access in exchange for contributing to the project — no cost due to its open-source model
- The announcement comes ahead of Nvidia’s GTC 2026 developer conference next week
Nvidia is developing an open-source AI agent platform called NemoClaw, designed for enterprise use. According to a report by Wired, citing anonymous sources, the company has already begun pitching the platform to major software companies.
WIRED says Nvidia is preparing to launch an open-source AI agent platform called NemoClaw, aimed at enterprise software companies.
The platform would let businesses deploy AI agents for internal tasks, work even outside $NVDA chips, and include security and privacy tools. pic.twitter.com/jEZWCR862i
— Wall St Engine (@wallstengine) March 9, 2026
Potential partners include Salesforce, Cisco, Google, Adobe, and CrowdStrike. No official partnerships have been confirmed yet.
Because NemoClaw is expected to be open-source, partners would likely use the platform for free. Early access would be offered in exchange for contributions such as code or resources.
The platform is designed to let companies deploy AI agents that perform tasks on behalf of their employees. It will also include built-in security and privacy tools — a feature likely aimed at addressing concerns that have followed similar AI agent tools.
Importantly, companies can access NemoClaw regardless of whether their software runs on Nvidia chips. That removes a barrier that has sometimes limited adoption of Nvidia’s proprietary tools.
Nvidia’s push into AI agents follows a broader industry shift away from large language models toward more autonomous tools. These agents can reason, plan, and carry out complex, multi-step tasks without constant human input.
The company has already been laying the groundwork. It released foundational models like Nemotron and Cosmos in recent months, both built to power AI agents.
It has also expanded its existing NeMo platform, which helps clients manage the full AI agent lifecycle — from data curation and training through to monitoring and optimization.
The ‘Claw’ Trend
NemoClaw’s name appears to tap into the rising popularity of so-called “claw”-style AI tools — open-source agents that run locally and carry out sequential tasks.
The most prominent example is OpenClaw, originally named Clawdbot and then Moltbot, which went viral earlier this year. OpenAI acquired the project shortly after and brought its creator on board.
Nvidia CEO Jensen Huang called OpenClaw “the most important software release probably ever,” signaling how seriously the company views this category.
Eyes on GTC 2026
The NemoClaw news lands just ahead of Nvidia’s annual developer conference, GTC 2026, scheduled for next week in San Jose.
The event is expected to feature announcements on Nvidia’s hardware and software roadmap, making it a likely stage for any formal NemoClaw reveal.
NVDA stock was up 0.38% in after-hours trading following the report. Analysts on TipRanks currently hold a Strong Buy consensus on the stock, with 39 Buy ratings and one Hold. The average price target of $272.16 implies roughly 49% upside from current levels.
Over the past year, NVDA has risen approximately 70.7%.





