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AI Browsers Like ChatGPT Atlas and Perplexity Comet Reportedly Able to Circumvent Paywalls

ChatGPT Atlas, Perplexity’s Comet, and several other AI-powered browsers are reportedly able to bypass paywalls and content blockers, raising concerns about the impact on digital publishing. According to a recent report, both Atlas and Comet were able to access and generate content from multiple paywalled articles when prompted to display the information, potentially undermining the subscription-based revenue model of news outlets and premium blogs. If these claims hold true, such capabilities could significantly affect publishers who rely on paid content for income.

The Columbia Journalism Review highlighted that Atlas and Comet were particularly effective at retrieving content hidden behind paywalls, while other AI browsers, including Edge’s Copilot mode and The Browser Company’s Dia, did not demonstrate the same level of success. Both Atlas and Comet are widely available to users, with Comet offering advanced “agentic actions,” which allow the AI to perform complex tasks autonomously, including interacting with websites to retrieve information.

However, follow-up tests indicate that results may vary. When attempting to replicate the experiment with Comet, the browser reportedly refused to provide content behind the same paywalls. This discrepancy suggests that AI providers might have implemented changes to their underlying models or that the results could depend on specific prompt techniques used in the original tests.

The situation underscores ongoing ethical and legal questions regarding AI and content access. Publishers may need to explore new ways to protect their premium material, while developers of AI browsers face scrutiny over whether their tools are enabling unauthorized access. The debate is likely to intensify as AI becomes increasingly capable of interacting with subscription-based and restricted content online.

OpenAI Launches ChatGPT Atlas Browser, Taking Direct Aim at Google Chrome

OpenAI unveiled ChatGPT Atlas on Tuesday, its first AI-powered web browser, positioning it as a serious challenger to Google Chrome’s dominance. Built around the company’s flagship chatbot, Atlas integrates conversational search, task automation, and real-time web interaction into one platform — a move that could reshape how users navigate the internet.

With more than 800 million weekly ChatGPT users, OpenAI aims to extend its reach into everyday browsing, potentially capturing vast amounts of consumer interaction data and accelerating the shift from keyword searches to AI-driven query synthesis. The launch triggered market ripples, with Alphabet (GOOGL.O) shares falling 1.8% in afternoon trading.

Atlas introduces features such as a ChatGPT sidebar that summarizes articles, compares products, and extracts data directly from websites. A premium “agent mode” allows ChatGPT to autonomously complete online tasks, from trip planning to shopping. In a live demo, the AI browsed for a recipe, then purchased all listed ingredients via Instacart, demonstrating what OpenAI calls “autonomous digital agency.”

The browser debuted on Apple’s macOS, with Windows, iOS, and Android versions coming soon. OpenAI CEO Sam Altman said the launch represents the company’s broader mission to “reimagine how people interact with information and the web.”

The move intensifies OpenAI’s rivalry with Google, which has been embedding its Gemini AI model into Chrome and search results. Google Chrome still commands 71.9% of the global browser market, according to StatCounter, but analysts say Atlas could erode that lead — especially if OpenAI enters the digital advertising space.

“Integrating chat into a browser is a precursor for OpenAI to start selling ads,” said Gil Luria, analyst at D.A. Davidson. “If it does, it could take a meaningful share of search advertising from Google, which currently holds about 90% of that market.”

The launch of Atlas marks a new phase in OpenAI’s challenge to Big Tech dominance, potentially transforming how people browse, search, and transact online — and redefining the balance of power in the AI era.