I whish they would go the same way that AMD did, but I doubt we will see it any time soon. The thing is, AMD/ATI lost the software war against NVidia for quite a while now. AMD didn't have much to lose by open-sourcing their driver. And the AMD proprietary driver on Linux where always a mess, whereas NVidia at least "work" (even though they just refuse to play well with the linux env...).
Now, with NVidia diving more and more into the ML / GPGPU market (which is less windows-focused), they might have more pressure to actually open-source their driver (or at least, finally make them actually integrated properly with Linux), at least for their server focused hardware. But I wouldn't bet on it any time soon.
Let's be honest, they have a dominant position on the market. And their driver, as awful as they are, work. I think a lot of things would have to change for them to have the incentive to open-source them. My only hope at this point is that, with the growing GPGPU market, they might finally start to see Linux not as a second-class citizen.
Now, with NVidia diving more and more into the ML / GPGPU market (which is less windows-focused), they might have more pressure to actually open-source their driver (or at least, finally make them actually integrated properly with Linux), at least for their server focused hardware. But I wouldn't bet on it any time soon.
Let's be honest, they have a dominant position on the market. And their driver, as awful as they are, work. I think a lot of things would have to change for them to have the incentive to open-source them. My only hope at this point is that, with the growing GPGPU market, they might finally start to see Linux not as a second-class citizen.