OpenAI launches Atlas browser
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Experts caution that AI-powered browsers like ChatGPT Atlas could open the door to new kinds of attacks—from prompt injections to data leaks—as artificial intelligence becomes more deeply woven into the web.
Recent versions of Edge already had many of the same features found in competing AI web browsers, such as Perplexity's Comet, OpenAI's ChatGPT Atlas and Google's Gemini in Chrome. This includes having an AI in the corner to chat about the web page you're looking at, analyze content across multiple tabs, or search the web.
OpenAI's new AI browser ChatGPT Atlas can mimic human clicks, potentially inflating ad costs and distorting website analytics.
OpenAI has launched ChatGPT Atlas, an AI-powered browser that integrates ChatGPT for interactive search, task automation, and personalized browsing, marking a major shift in web navigation.
Despite safeguards, OpenAI's new AI browser 'can still make (sometimes surprising!) mistakes,' warns CISO Dane Stuckey, who also cites prompt injection attacks as an 'emerging risk.'
Is ChatGPT Atlas the real deal and manages to hold its ground in front of the users’ favourite Chrome and new kid in the block – the Perplexity Comet? Read on to find out more:
From OpenAI's big challenge to Google Chrome's dominance with the release of the Atlas web browser to tech giants riding an investment boom, we round up the week's big stories from the AI revolution.
The new application offers a promising vision of where the internet is heading, though it make take more time to get there.