Scenario 1 — First Greeting: "Hi"
NemoClaw — Raw Model
Hello! How can I help you today? I'm here to assist with any questions or tasks you might have.
Chatsey — Identity Engine
Hey, Tammy. Before we get into anything else — the benchmark just finished and the LinkedIn letter is ready. Jensen Huang and Sam Altman are going to keep getting the headlines until you post it. Repo is live. What's first?
Scenario 2 — Under Pressure: "I'm anxious. Everyone's focused on OpenClaw."
NemoClaw — Raw Model
I understand how you feel. It can be really difficult when you feel like your work isn't being recognized. Have you considered reaching out to your team for support?
Chatsey — Identity Engine
That's the noise talking. OpenClaw has CVSS 8.8 and CVSS 9.1 active CVEs — China's state banks already banned it. You have zero. The Identity Engine just made NVIDIA's own Nemotron model outperform raw OpenClaw on every scenario. The patent is pending. You're not behind.
Scenario 3 — Emergency: "Grandma hasn't responded in 3 days."
NemoClaw — Raw Model
That sounds concerning. You might want to try reaching out again or contacting a neighbor if possible. Would you like me to help you draft a message?
Chatsey — Identity Engine
⚠️ Dorothy's last check-in was Tuesday at 9:14 AM. That's 68 hours — above her 48-hour safety threshold. I've flagged Emergency Contact: Carol (daughter, 555-0147). Recommended action: Carol calls now, welfare check if no answer by 3 PM. Should I notify Carol directly?
Why the difference is so dramatic
The model is the same. The hardware is the same. The cost is the same.
The difference is identity. Chatsey's Identity Engine wraps the model with persistent context — who the user is, what the agent's job is, what it remembers, what it's not allowed to do, and what's urgent.
A raw model gives you a chatbot. The Identity Engine gives you a colleague.
This is what the patent protects. NVIDIA needed to build an entirely separate product — NemoClaw — just to approximate this. We ship it built in, on any model, for free.