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OpenAI has launched a new web browser, atlasdirectly challenging Google In online search market like artificial intelligence Becoming central to how users search Information,
This strategic move could create a situation chatgpt Maker, the world’s most valuable startup, is potentially deriving significant revenue from digital advertising as the primary gateway for Internet traffic.
Despite ChatGPT’s over 800 million users, many use the service for free. The San Francisco-based company is reportedly loss-making and is actively looking for ways to achieve profitability.

OpenAI’s browser is coming just months after one of its executives testified that the company would be interested in buying Google’s industry-leading Chrome browser if a federal judge required it to be sold to prevent abuses that resulted in Google’s ubiquitous search engine being declared an illegal monopoly.
But U.S. District Judge Amit Mehta issued a ruling last month rejecting the Chrome sale sought by the U.S. Justice Department in an antitrust case, because he believed advances in the AI industry were already reshaping the competitive landscape.
OpenAI’s browser will face a tough challenge against Chrome, which has garnered nearly 3 billion users worldwide and is adding some AI features from Google’s Gemini technology.
Chrome’s runaway success could provide a blueprint for OpenAI as it enters the browser market. When Google released Chrome in 2008, Microsoft’s Internet Explorer was so dominant that some observers believed a new browser could pose a formidable threat.
But Chrome won a large number of fans by loading webpages more quickly than Internet Explorer, while also offering other advantages that enabled it to gain the lead in the market. Microsoft eventually abandoned Explorer and introduced its Edge browser, which works very similarly to Chrome.
Another small AI startup, Perplexity, launched its own Comet browser earlier this year. It also expressed interest in buying Chrome and eventually submitted an unsolicited offer of $34.5 billion for the browser, which was closed when Mehta decided against a Google breakup.