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Is ChatGPT's Atlas Browser the Future of Internet?

The AI browser offers various benefits but it is paid. Experts think it can give tough fight to Google.

Is ChatGPT's Atlas Browser the Future of Internet?

After using ChatGPT Atlas, OpenAI's new web browser, users may notice few issues. This is not the same as Google Chrome, which about 60% of users use. It is based on a chatbot that you are supposed to converse with in order to browse the internet.  

One of the notes said, "Messages limit reached," "No models that are currently available support the tools in use," another stated.  

Following that: "You've hit the free plan limit for GPT-5."  

Paid browser 

According to OpenAI, it will simplify and improve internet usage. One more step toward becoming "a true super-assistant." Super or not, however, assistants are not free, and the corporation must start generating significantly more revenue from its 800 million customers.

According to OpenAI, Atlas allows us to "rethink what it means to use the web". It appears to be comparable to Chrome or Apple's Safari at first glance, with one major exception: a sidebar chatbot. These are early days, but there is the potential for significant changes in how we use the Internet. What is certain is that this will be a high-end gadget that will only function properly if you pay a monthly subscription price. Given how accustomed we are to free internet access, many people would have to drastically change their routines.

Competitors, data, and money

The founding objective of OpenAI was to achieve artificial general intelligence (AGI), which roughly translates to AI that can match human intelligence. So, how does a browser assist with this mission? It actually doesn't. However, it has the potential to increase revenue. The company has persuaded venture capitalists and investors to spend billions of dollars in it, and it must now demonstrate a return on that investment. In other words, it needs to generate revenue. However, obtaining funds through typical internet advertising may be risky. Atlas might also grant the corporation access to a large amount of user data.

The ultimate goal of these AI systems is scale; the more data you feed them, the better they will become. The web is built for humans to use, so if Atlas can observe how we order train tickets, for example, it will be able to learn how to better traverse these processes.  

Will it kill Google?

Then we get to compete. Google Chrome is so prevalent that authorities throughout the world are raising their eyebrows and using terms like "monopoly" to describe it. It will not be easy to break into that market.

Google's Gemini AI is now integrated into the search engine, and Microsoft has included Copilot to its Edge browser. Some called ChatGPT the "Google killer" in its early days, predicting that it would render online search as we know it obsolete. It remains to be seen whether enough people are prepared to pay for that added convenience, and there is still a long way to go before Google is dethroned.

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