Browser agents are the shift from AI that answers questions to AI that performs tasks across websites, forms, and workflows. The articles in this topic track the emerging category of agentic browsers—Atlas, Comet, Dia—and what happens when your team's primary interface to software becomes an autonomous agent.
Key themes
Perplexity Comet and agentic browser workflow design
ChatGPT Atlas versus Edge Copilot enterprise comparison
HARPA AI and browser extension security for business professionals
MCP and Mariner for API-era agent deployment
SEO impact when browsers replace search with agentic execution
Why it matters
For European SMEs, browser agents change the cost structure of research, customer support, and procurement by replacing tab switching with autonomous execution. The articles here evaluate which browsers can handle business logins safely, how agentic browsing changes your website's discoverability, and what security policies you need when employees delegate credential access to an AI extension. The firms that test these tools early are rebuilding their operating procedures around agentic execution; the ones that wait will be forced to adopt someone else's workflow.
Most SEO professionals still work like this: Open Ahrefs. Export keyword data to CSV. Open a spreadsheet. Paste the data. Open competitor websites in separate tabs. Manually scan for "People Also Ask" boxes. Copy questions into a document. Open your CMS. Compare your content to…
The author emphasizes that "speed now compounds. If you don't adapt your role and your stack, AI will outpace your roadmap." The piece collects the most valuable recent publications with actionable next steps.
OpenAI has launched \*\*ChatGPT Atlas\*\*, a browser positioned as the first built around conversation rather than tabs. The article by Dr Hernani Costa, published October 21, 2025, compares Atlas to competing AI browsers like Comet and Dia.
A new security study from **UCL (University College London), UC Davis, and Mediterranea University of Reggio Calabria** reveals that many popular generative AI browser assistants are collecting sensitive user data, often in direct violation of their own privacy policies.
A new security study from UCL (University College London), UC Davis, and Mediterranea University of Reggio Calabria reveals that many popular generative AI browser assistants are collecting sensitive user data, often in direct violation of their own privacy policies.
Just a few days after OpenAI launched \[ChatGPT Atlas]\(), Microsoft fired back with its reimagined Edge featuring \[Copilot Mode]\(). If you think this timing's a coincidence, think again. We're witnessing the opening shots in a battle to redefine how you interact with the…
OpenAI released ChatGPT \[Atlas]\(<https://openai.com/index/introducing-chatgpt-atlas/?utm_source=www.firstaimovers.com&utm_medium=newsletter&utm_campaign=chatgpt-atlas-unlock-the-web-with-chatgpt-by-your-side>) this last Tuesday (21st Oct.), and after months of testing…
Atlassian's acquisition of The Browser Company for $610 million represents the most significant enterprise bet on AI-native browsing to date. By transforming [Dia](https://voices.firstaimovers.com/ai-browser-revolution-dia-vs-comet-b8660c3070a6) from a consumer tool into a…
If you know me, you'll know I don't jump on every shiny new tech bandwagon. After 25+ years in this industry, I've seen too many "revolutionary" tools that promise everything and deliver mediocrity. When Perplexity launched…
The psychological barrier isn't technical; it's learning to delegate. When I first asked an AI browser to handle a complex research task spanning 15 tabs, I found myself hovering nervously, micromanaging every click (read the full story…
I've been using **[Comet](https://www.perplexity.ai/hub/blog/introducing-comet)**, the new AI-native browser from Perplexity, thanks to an early access invite from the team. As someone practically tethered to my web browser - whether it's Chrome, Arc, or Safari - I don't say…
OpenAI’s Model Context Protocol and Google’s Project Mariner bring universal data pipes and browser-level automation—here’s how to build on them before the crowd catches up.