OpenAI launched a browser, ChatGPT Atlas, yesterday, marking a new milestone in the arms race of AI browsers. The announcement comes after Perplexity facetiously offered to buy Google Chrome and launched its own browser, Comet, and a number of AI-integrated web browsers have hit the market.

Atlas provides a new medium for OpenAI to reach and engage users. By owning a browser, OpenAI can track user behavior off ChatGPT, and it takes some infrastructure into its own hands to run AI agents. For example, if the browser handles user authentication, OpenAI could make agentic commerce a near reality. At the launch event, Sam Altman demonstrated Atlas’ agent mode, which can browse websites and use word processors on users’ behalf.

OpenAI Has High Hurdles To Clear In A Competitive Market

OpenAI’s decision to launch a browser isn’t a guaranteed success. Growing Atlas requires OpenAI to:

  • Unsettle a web browser behemoth. Google Chrome is a dominant player in the web browser space. Even in Europe, where the Digital Markets Act requires gatekeeper companies to prompt users to set a default browser, Chrome’s user base hasn’t been significantly impacted. It grew by promoting Chrome to its sizable audience of Search users, a playbook that OpenAI is trying to copy while facing a much more complex market dynamic. And so far, none of the US Department of Justice’s proposed remedies for Google’s monopolies call for Google to spin off Chrome.
  • Differentiate in an increasingly crowded market. More browsers are integrating AI. Some are natural couplings, like Google Gemini and Chrome or Microsoft Copilot and Edge. An AI-enabled browser alone isn’t a differentiator; OpenAI will have to find a meaningful value proposition to pull in more users — which, again, is a tall order when it’s facing a very powerful, highly used incumbent web browser.
  • Expand past power users. Atlas will draw attention among heavy ChatGPT users, but there’s a potential trap of pulling in users who are already likely to use ChatGPT on any device and are relatively easy to retain. ChatGPT will need to find a way to attract the sporadic user while being careful not to increase barriers to entry for these casual users. As of launch, the browser’s agent mode is only available to ChatGPT users who pay a subscription fee.
  • Assuage privacy and security concerns. ChatGPT users have already been caught off guard by reports that their conversations are discoverable in Google search results. Even Sam Altman is surprised by how much users trust ChatGPT. It remains to be seen how OpenAI will use users’ data from Atlas, but for users who prefer anonymity and privacy, the browser may be too great of a risk.
  • Prove return on investment without degrading the user experience. Browser development takes time and money (just ask Firefox). For OpenAI to get value from Atlas, it has to spend money to make money. It already offers a subscription model, but interest is low — only 20% of US online adults who use AI platforms or tools for personal use say that they pay for them. OpenAI may be tempted to show ads to recoup costs and turn a profit, but it also must deliver a good user experience to stand out in a competitive market, which limits its options. Its nascent affiliate network can provide some reprieve, but consumer awareness of and appetite for agentic commerce is low (for now).

For more on where consumers stand on AI, check out our research (below) or set up a guidance session.

Thank you to Paddy Harrington, Nikhil Lai, and Rowan Curran for contributing to this blog.