Updated 15 December 2025 at 20:31 IST

Nvidia Unveils New Open-Source AI Models Amid Boom in Chinese Offerings

Nvidia on Monday revealed the third generation of its "Nemotron" large-language models aimed at writing, coding and other tasks.

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Nvidia has launched new open-source AI models. | Image: Reuters

Nvidia on Monday unveiled a new family of open-source artificial intelligence models that it says will be faster, cheaper and smarter than its previous offerings, as open-source offerings from Chinese AI labs proliferate.

Nvidia is primarily known for providing chips that firms such as OpenAI use to train their closed-source models and charge money for them. But it also offers a slew of its own models for everything from physics simulations to self-driving vehicles as open-source software that can be used by researchers or by other companies, with firms such as Palantir Technologies weaving Nvidia's model into their products.

Nvidia on Monday revealed the third generation of its "Nemotron" large-language models aimed at writing, coding and other tasks. The smallest of the models, called Nemotron 3 Nano, was being released on Monday, with two other, larger versions coming in the first half of 2026.

Nvidia, which has become the world's most valuable listed company, said that Nemotron 3 Nano was more efficient than its predecessor - meaning it would be cheaper to run - and would do better at long tasks with multiple steps.

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Nvidia is releasing the models as open-source offerings from Chinese tech firms such as DeepSeek, Moonshot AI and Alibaba Group Holdings are becoming widely used in the tech industry, with companies such as Airbnb disclosing use of Alibaba's Qwen open-source model.

At the same time, CNBC and Bloomberg have reported that Meta Platforms (META.O), opens new tab is considering shifting toward closed-source models, leaving Nvidia as one of the most prominent US providers of open-source offerings.
Many US states and government entities have banned the use of Chinese models over security concerns.

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Kari Briski, vice president of generative AI software for enterprise at Nvidia, said the company aimed to provide a "model that people can depend on", and was also openly releasing its training data and other tools so that government and business users could test it for security and customise it.

"This is why we're treating it like a library," Briski told Reuters in an interview. "This is why we're committed to it from a software engineering perspective."

Read more: Here Is When ChatGPT's 'Adult' Mode Will Roll Out

Published By : Shubham Verma

Published On: 15 December 2025 at 20:31 IST