OpenAI is discontinuing Atlas, its AI powered browser launched last year. Instead of maintaining a standalone browser, OpenAI is integrating Atlas AI browsing capabilities into the ChatGPT desktop app and a new Chrome extension, allowing users to browse, summarise webpages and complete online tasks without switching between multiple applications.
The decision comes as OpenAI narrows its product strategy following reports that the company has scaled back several experimental projects in recent months. Rather than competing directly with traditional browsers, the company now appears to be positioning ChatGPT as an AI workspace that works alongside existing browsing experiences.
During the transition, OpenAI is introducing a ChatGPT extension for Google Chrome. The extension gives ChatGPT access to the webpage currently being viewed that enables users to ask questions, generate summaries, and perform contextual tasks directly from the browser. The feature is expected to compete with similar AI assistants already available in Chrome and Microsoft Edge.
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OpenAI is also upgrading the ChatGPT desktop app with expanded web browsing capabilities. The users will be able to open websites, sign into online accounts, download files and interact with webpages without leaving the ChatGPT interface. The desktop experience is further enhanced by a cloud-based browser that runs on OpenAI’s servers. This remote browsing environment allows ChatGPT’s AI agents to carry out web-based tasks on a user’s behalf.
This comes after the competition in AI space is increasing day by day. Over the past year, many companies have introduced AI first browsers or browser assistants to challenge Googles’s dominance. However, OpenAI’s latest move suggests it sees AI-assisted browsing as a feature within ChatGPT rather than a standalone browser product.