According to "Business Insider" reports, Nvidia CEO Huang Jensen praised the AI ​​open source agent OpenClaw at the GTC conference on Monday, saying that companies cannot ignore the moment of change brought by OpenClaw."Every company in the world today must formulate an OpenClaw strategy and an intelligent system strategy," Huang said. "This is a new computer form."


Jen-Hsun Huang announces NemoClaw, an intelligent agent

Huang Renxun spoke highly of OpenClaw. OpenClaw, formerly known as Clawdbot and Moltbot, is an open source AI agent that has caused a craze in Silicon Valley. Although OpenAI poached OpenClaw founder Peter Steinberger, the service continues to exist as an open source project.

“OpenClaw allows us to create personalized agents,” he emphasized, “and the impact is beyond imagination.”

Comparable to Windows' impact on personal computing

Huang noted that OpenClaw “brings what the industry needs most at exactly the right time.”

Huang Renxun said that the significance of OpenClaw to AI is comparable to the transformation of Windows to personal computing. It means,OpenClaw popularizes AI agents into the hands of every ordinary person just as Windows popularized personal computers.

"It allows the entire industry to seize this open source technology stack and use it to create value." Huang Renxun said.

safety hazard

However, Huang Renxun also pointed out that there is a major caveat regarding the use of OpenClaw, which is also a problem that Nvidia has been working hard to solve:Security.

NVIDIA announced the launch of its customized version based on OpenClaw called NemoClaw, which allows users to add privacy and security controls to their AI agents.

"It has network guardrails and privacy routers, so we can protect and prevent these agents from performing arbitrary tasks within our company, so we can use them safely," Huang said.

NVIDIA is promoting NemoClaw by hosting a "Build Your Agent" event at the conference, where attendees can develop their own custom AI agents.

"OpenClaw brings people closer to AI and helps create a world where everyone has their own agent," OpenClaw founder Steinberg said in a statement released by NVIDIA. "With NVIDIA and the broader ecosystem, we are building these agents and their guardrails so that anyone can create powerful and safe AI assistants."

Huang also announced a series of other news at the Nvidia GTC conference on Monday, including the launch of a new inference system integrated with Groq technology. Groq is an AI chip startup that was previously acquired by Nvidia for $20 billion.

He also predicted that market demand for its Blackwell and Rubin AI chips will reach $1 trillion by 2027.