NVIDIA: OpenClaw + Nemo Claw
At GTC NVIDIA pushed OpenClaw — an open framework for personal AI agents — and Nemo Claw, a kernel‑level sandbox designed to run autonomous multimodal agents securely. That signal makes secure agent governance a board‑level issue for audit and risk committees as enterprises pilot agentic workflows. (franksworld.com)
NVIDIA’s NemoClaw bundle installs NVIDIA Nemotron models and the new OpenShell runtime with a single command and supports deployment on GeForce RTX PCs, NVIDIA RTX PRO workstations, DGX Station and DGX Spark supercomputers. (nvidianews.nvidia.com) The NemoClaw repository on GitHub carries an Apache‑2.0 LICENSE file and shows active development with hundreds of commits, recent security hardenings in the sandbox image, and an installer script to simplify enterprise rollout. (github.com) Independent audits of the OpenClaw ecosystem found hundreds of malicious ClawHub skills (Koi Security reported 341 in a February audit) while the platform was hit by a critical vulnerability tracked as CVE‑2026‑25253; NVD and MITRE list that CVE with a CVSS base score of 8.8. (thehackernews.com) Microsoft published deployment guidance warning that OpenClaw is “not appropriate to run on a standard personal or enterprise workstation,” and Bitdefender issued lab advisories reporting widespread abuse and supply‑chain risks within the ClawHub skills registry. (microsoft.com) NVIDIA’s NemoClaw adds OpenShell sandboxing, policy‑based enforcement, a privacy router for routing inference between local Nemotron models and cloud models, and audit/logging hooks intended to address the supply‑chain and runtime threats observed in the agent ecosystem. (nvidianews.nvidia.com) Early ecosystem signals show third‑party integrations and partner interest—NemoClaw ecosystem pages and industry reporting list vendors including Adobe, Salesforce, SAP, Dell, Cisco and LangChain as building integrations or testing deployments. (nemoclawai.io) NVIDIA positioned OpenClaw and NemoClaw at GTC (March 16–19, 2026) where the conference drew more than 30,000 attendees and Jensen Huang described OpenClaw as a foundational platform for personal AI, signaling that both adoption scale and enterprise security questions were central topics at the show. (nvidianews.nvidia.com)