The Future of AI in Marketing. Your Shortcut to Smarter, Faster Marketing.
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Discover 7 ways to enhance your marketing strategy with AI.
News of the day
1. Nvidia introduces NemoClaw, an open-source stack designed to add privacy and security controls to OpenClaw, enhancing its enterprise readiness and user trust. → Read more
2. Mistral AI unveils Mistral Small 4, a compact yet powerful model with 128 expert modules for fast responses, reasoning, and image processing. → Read more
3. D-ID unveils V4 Expressive Visual Agents, ultra-high-fidelity digital humans for real-time conversations and enterprise video, offering low latency, 4K resolution, and expressive delivery at a fraction of the cost. → Read more
4. Sears' AI chatbot exposed millions of customer chat logs and audio recordings online, including personal details. This raises privacy concerns and highlights risks of AI deployment. → Read more
Our take
Hi Dotikers!
Yesterday, we were questioning the strategic logic behind Google's acquisition of Wiz, and what 32 billion dollars says about the real state of the race for secure cloud. Today, we're changing scale. Not the scale of investments, but the scale of usage. Because an open source lobster is reshuffling the deck in the AI agent market, and Nvidia just picked its side.
OpenClaw, the autonomous personal agent launched in November 2025 by Austrian developer Peter Steinberger, has become one of the most starred open source projects in GitHub history. The concept is deceptively simple: an agent that runs locally on your machine, connects to the models of your choice (Claude, GPT, DeepSeek), and acts on your behalf via WhatsApp, Telegram, or Discord. No chatbot, no web interface, no subscription. Just a background process that, if all goes well, sends your emails and manages your calendar while you sleep. If all goes well.
Nvidia didn't wait for the security concerns to be ironed out before embracing the ecosystem. The chip giant published NemoClaw, an open source overlay that adds privacy and security controls to the OpenClaw runtime. It's a strong signal: where CrowdStrike and Palo Alto Networks are sounding the alarm on prompt injection risks, data leaks, and misconfigured instances exposed in plain text on the web, Nvidia is choosing to anchor itself in the ecosystem rather than wait on the sidelines. The logic is relentless: the more autonomous agents proliferate, the more demand for GPU infrastructure skyrockets.
The founder himself acknowledged it: OpenClaw isn't built for non-technical users, not yet. But between Meta's Manus fumbling with PDFs, Codex crossing two million weekly active users, and Chinese engineers charging 500 yuan to install the lobster for private individuals, the personal agent market has taken shape in just a matter of weeks.
This isn't a trend. It's infrastructure being built in real time, with or without a safety net.
Alexis
Meme of the day



