OpenAI Unveils ChatGPT Atlas for AI-Powered Web Browsing

By Media Infotainment Team | Wednesday, 22 October 2025

OpenAI has just rolled out ChatGPT Atlas, a new web browser that puts its popular AI assistant front and center.

This isn’t just another browser—it’s designed to make browsing smarter by weaving ChatGPT into every step of your online experience, helping you get things done faster and easier.

With Atlas, you can ask ChatGPT to summarize articles, organize tasks, or pull insights from pages you’ve visited.

For example, if you’re browsing job listings, Atlas can later whip up a report combining those listings with the latest industry trends, all based on what you’ve looked at.

You’re in control of this “memory” feature, with simple options to view, save, or delete your data to keep things private.

 

  • OpenAI Launches ChatGPT Atlas: The AI-Powered Browser Revolutionizing Web Browsing
  • ChatGPT Atlas Enhances Productivity with Smart Summaries, Task Organization, and Agent Mode"
  • AI Browsers Like ChatGPT Atlas Transform How Users Navigate and Interact with the Web

If you’re a premium subscriber—on Plus, Pro, or Go plans—you get access to “agent mode,” where ChatGPT can take on bigger tasks like planning events or doing research for you, using what it knows from your browsing. Free users get some of these cool features too, and businesses or schools can try a beta version.

OpenAI says Atlas is about making the web work for you: “With AI, we can rethink how a browser helps you achieve your goals.” It’s launching first on macOS worldwide, with Windows, iOS, and Android versions coming soon.

Atlas is OpenAI’s big push to compete with browsers like Google Chrome, joining other AI-powered options like Perplexity’s Comet and Brave. It’s part of a growing trend where browsers do more than just search—they act like assistants. With over 800 million people already using ChatGPT weekly, Atlas could shake up how we all use the internet.

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Some worry about privacy with all this data tracking, but OpenAI stresses that you decide what the browser remembers. As one tech expert put it, “Browsers used to just show you the web—now they’re helping you navigate it.” Atlas is a bold step, and it’s one to watch.

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