
-
Dembele scores on return as PSG hammer Leverkusen 7-2
-
Newcastle too good for 'little Magpie' Mourinho's Benfica
-
GM cuts EV production in Canada, cites Trump backpedal
-
Gyokeres ends goal drought in Arsenal thrashing of Atletico
-
Netflix shares sink as quarterly profit misses mark
-
Haaland scores again as Man City beat Villarreal
-
Trump and Putin's Budapest summit shelved
-
Liverpool disrupted by flight delay, Gravenberch out of Frankfurt trip
-
Djokovic pulls out of Paris Masters
-
OpenAI unveils search browser in challenge to Google
-
Lopez, Rashford inspire Barca rout of Olympiacos
-
Wolvaardt stars as South Africa crush Pakistan in rain-hit World Cup contest
-
Trump urged Ukraine to give up land in 'tense' talks: Kyiv source
-
Kids paid 'a huge price' for Covid measures: ex-UK PM Johnson
-
Louvre jewel heist valued at $102 mn: French prosecutor
-
Adidas hikes profit forecast as contains US tariff impact
-
Sundance film festival sets tributes to late co-founder Redford
-
Wife of Colombian killed in US strike says life taken unjustly
-
Dodging Trump's tariffs, Brazil's Embraer lands record orders
-
West Indies beat Bangladesh in super over after setting ODI spin record
-
GM shares soar on better tariff outlook and EV backpedal
-
Stocks rise on China-US hopes, gold and silver slump
-
What we know about the downfall of Prince Andrew
-
Colombia, US vow to improve anti-drug strategy amid Trump-Petro feud
-
Virginia Giuffre memoir goes on sale, piling pressure on Prince Andrew
-
Artificial insemination raises hopes for world's rarest big cat
-
Maresca says Chelsea's red-card run is teaching opportunity
-
Oasis guitars among music memorabilia worth £3 mn at UK auction
-
Jane Birkin's Hermes handbag up for auction in Abu Dhabi
-
Scotland rugby coach Townsend 'doesn't see conflicts' with Red Bull role
-
Pakistan-South Africa Test in balance after Maharaj takes seven
-
Ozempic-maker Novo Nordisk to shake up board
-
Europe backs Trump's Ukraine peace push as Kremlin hedges on summit
-
Rees-Zammit back for Wales as Tandy names first squad
-
Maharaj takes seven wickets with South Africa-Pakistan Test in balance
-
Tunisian city on general strike over factory pollution
-
France intensifies hunt for Louvre raiders as museum security scrutinised
-
Hermes taps British designer to lead its menswear line
-
Conservative Takaichi named Japan's first woman PM
-
US Vice President Vance in Israel to shore up Gaza deal
-
Stocks up on China-US hopes, Japan's new PM lifts Tokyo
-
Bayern Munich extend coach Kompany's contract until 2029
-
Canadian teen Mboko eager to build on 'crazy' breakthrough year
-
England women's great Scarratt retires from rugby
-
Golf's Bryan Bros on 'wild' ride from Internet to facing major champs
-
South Africa grind to 86-2 at tea in reply to Pakistan's 333
-
Japanese man jailed after rare public accusation of rape
-
Chinese woman charged over gold theft at Paris Natural History Museum
-
Maradona's heirs sign deal with Swedish company to market brand
-
Indonesia to repatriate British grandmother on death row in drug case

OpenAI unveils search browser in challenge to Google
ChatGPT-maker OpenAI on Tuesday announced an "Atlas" search browser, leveraging its artificial intelligence prowess in a direct challenge to Google Chrome.
"This is an AI-powered web browser built around ChatGPT," OpenAI chief Sam Altman said in a streamed presentation.
OpenAI has ramped up its challenge to Google, which has responded by rapidly building more AI capabilities into search and across its platform.
Altman and a team of executives demonstrated an "agent" mode that has a chatbot conduct searches on a user's behalf.
Altman said that in agent mode, ChatGPT uses the web browser independently, returning with what it finds.
"It's got all your stuff and is clicking around," Altman said.
"You can watch it or not, you don't have to, but it's using the internet for you."
Atlas will go live Tuesday on computers powered by Apple's operating system free of charge, but agent mode will only be available to users of paid Plus or Pro versions of ChatGPT, according to Altman.
"We want to bring this to Windows and to mobile devices as quickly as we can," Altman said, without providing a timeline.
"This is still early days for this project."
Some Atlas offerings demonstrated in the stream seemed similar to features already incorporated into Google Chrome and Microsoft Edge internet search browsers.
- Pressure on Google -
Tech industry rivals Amazon, Google, Meta, Microsoft and Elon Musk's xAI have been pouring billions of dollars into artificial intelligence since the blockbuster launch of the first version of ChatGPT in late 2022.
"OpenAI's browser puts pressure on Google," Emarketer technology analyst Jacob Bourne told AFP.
"This is another step in the AI race as tech companies try to make their AI interfaces the first point of contact for internet users."
OpenAI has an opportunity to ride the popularity of ChatGPT to win people over to its browser, according to the analyst.
However, Bourne noted that Google has a significant infrastructure advantage in terms of providing browser capabilities to billions of users.
A big question is how well Atlas will perform when under pressure from the kinds of user volume handled by Google, he added.
The debut of Atlas comes on the heels of Google escaping a breakup of its Chrome browser in a major US competition case, but with the judge imposing remedies whose impact remains uncertain just as AI starts to compete with search engines.
Judge Amit Mehta, who found a year ago that Google illegally maintained monopolies in online search, did not order the company to sell off its widely-used Chrome browser.
Instead, he ordered remedies including requirements to share data with other firms so they could develop their own search products, and barring exclusive deals to make Google the only search engine on a device or service.
Mehta himself noted that the landscape has changed since the US Justice Department and 11 states launched their antitrust case against Google in 2020.
- Challenges -
OpenAI, Perplexity, and Microsoft have been ramping up challenges to Google, which dominates the online search market where it earns most of its revenue through targeted advertising.
OpenAI recently unveiled a new feature for ChatGPT, the leading generative AI model with 800 million weekly users, enabling it to interact with everyday apps like Spotify and Booking.com.
The new functionality enables ChatGPT to interact with various apps to select music, search for real estate or explore hotel and flight booking sites.
Meanwhile, Perplexity AI in August announced a new model for sharing search revenue with publishers.
The company's media partners will get paid when their work is used by Perplexity's Comet browser or AI assistant to satisfy queries or requests, according to the San Francisco-based startup.
Perplexity is one of Silicon Valley's hottest startups, whose AI-powered search engine is often mentioned as a potential disruptor to Google.
Google shares were down slightly more than one percent in trading that followed OpenAI announcing Atlas.
P.Vogel--VB