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Sunday, May 31, 2026

Our tech overlords are planning for conscious AI to conquer the cosmos. What could go wrong? | Technology | The Guardian

Our tech overlords are planning for conscious AI to conquer the cosmos. What could go wrong? | Technology | The Guardian

"Sam Altman, the chief executive of OpenAI, took to the Internet a few years ago to propose that homo sapiens would be the first species “to design our own descendants”. In his best case scenario, the “merge” between humans and artificial intelligence occurs at some point over the next 50 years. The alternative, where we remain simply human and the machines follow their own path, is more ominous. “If two different species both want the same thing and only one can have it – in this case, to be the dominant species on the planet and beyond – they are going to have conflict,” he wrote.

More recently, Elon Musk, the world’s richest man, who at one point last year was granted the power to reconfigure the US federal government, argued on his social media platform, X, that “it increasingly appears that humanity is a biological bootloader for digital superintelligence” – our role in the history of the cosmos reduced to that of the low level code that boots up a computer before you can run sophisticated programs on it.

And Musk is on the tame side of the evolutionary proposition. According to Silicon Valley lore, he once pushed back against Google co-founder Larry Page’s claim that our next manifestation, to follow in the steps of the meat-and-bone humans you see walking about today, would necessarily have digital form in order to spread throughout the galaxy. (In fact, he recently testified in court that it was those concerns that prompted him to found OpenAI with Altman.) Meat and bones do not make for efficient interstellar travelers.

It would be a mistake to understand these weird worldviews as an ultimately harmless take by techies who grew up on a diet of dystopian science fiction. The notion that we are approaching the end of the homo sapiens, as defined since Darwin’s day, is coalescing into a durable body of belief among the elites at the helm of our technological future.

Their dreams are not all perfectly aligned. But like the folk stories and superstitions that have for ever revolved around more established religious traditions, the collection of far-fetched scenarios valley oligarchs are writing into our future exhibits the hallmarks of a religion in the making, a body of belief to confer a sense of cosmic transcendence and inevitability to their hi-tech project.

In their minds, they are on their way to build the next phase of humanity, a “transhuman” future. In this future, they can satisfy their desire for immortality and assert power over the cosmos as transhumans multiply and expand across the galaxy. Their ultimate goal: to execute on a techno-mystical dream to distill the essence of what it is to be human, consciousness and all, into bits of information to be downloaded as binary code on to some non-biological substrate such as a silicon chip, or beamed through space as electromagnetic waves.

The mythopoeic infrastructure assembled in and around San Francisco carries risk for humanity as we know it. It justifies steering technology along a path that is, at best, indifferent to the needs, hopes and aspirations of everyday humans in a quest to deliver a future that only looks like utopia to these masters of the universe.

Who cares if artificial intelligence obliterates humdrum human labor when it offers us the opportunity to transcend our body and conquer the galaxy? The fantasy directs the technology: rather than building economically useful tools that can help humans expand their capabilities, the overlords of AI are sinking vast resources into a dream of building superhumans.

These beliefs have pushed to the fore over the last quarter century, accompanying the advance of information technologies that have delivered enormous wealth and power to a new IT elite, one committed to science-based progress and hungry for transcendent meaning, but indifferent or even hostile to the propositions and moral constraints of organized religion.

“Silicon Valley has been a militantly secular space,” a prominent thinker about technology whose employer would be unhappy if he went on record told me. “It created a God-shaped hole, which it filled in its image.” Having rejected standard religious sources of purpose, they found an alternative path to provide their lives with significance via sci-fi transhuman dreams. Or as Musk observed in a singsong post on X: “Atheism left an empty space. Secular religion took its place.”

While this newfangled cosmogony has been cobbled together at least since the early days of the Internet, it reached toward breathtaking new horizons on the shoulders of artificial intelligence, which opened up vast new possibilities for the transhuman dream. Douglas Rushkoff, a critic of the technological oligarchy and its ambitions, put it thus, referencing the 1980s-era satire featuring the first ever “computer-generated” TV host. “I guess AI makes the notion of having a Max Headroom existence plausible.”

Weird though the valley’s proposed utopia may appear, it fits a longer tradition of business titans with vast unrestrained wealth seeking to endow their endeavors with transcendent value. Henry Ford, as historian Kati Curts has written, also believed his calling was about more than transforming manufacturing to make cars; he believed he was on a mission to re-engineer the world to improve society.

Ford built Fordlândia, an attempt to create a harmonic social order supported by an industrial-scale rubber plantation in the Brazilian rainforest. Altman, Musk and the valley gang want to merge consciousness with AI and conquer the cosmos. The distance between these visions has mostly to do with the technological possibilities of their time. The proposition that they are engineering some utopian vision that humanity should be grateful for is not that dissimilar.

a view of buildings
Fordlândia in Aveiro, Brazil. Photograph: Joel Auerbach/Getty Images

As Nobel prize winning economist Daron Acemoglu wrote: “The handful of people unleashing this technology on the world are guided by an ideology of control (over humanity) and by a conviction that machines are uniformly better than humans.”

The danger, for the rest of us, is how the technological oligarchy’s aspirations will reshape the economies and societies of our present, as they redirect resources – capital, energy, minerals, water – to turbocharge AI and bring about the transhuman dream at the expense of healthcare, education or poverty reduction in the here and now.

While Americans are starting to show some signs of discomfort over the unrestrained appetites of this crop of AI moguls, the Trump administration has shown few signs so far of wanting to put in place regulatory guardrails and constrain their efforts in any way.

Future utopias on the menu

There are a variety of views in the valley about what a future humanity should look like.

Altman and Page are perhaps the most committed to the goal of merging humans with superintelligent technology and abandoning the flesh. Altman was an early subscriber to Nectome, a valley startup that proposes to retrieve information present in the brain’s anatomical layout and molecular details in order to replicate consciousness in the future. “I assume my brain will be uploaded to the cloud,” Altman told the MIT Technology Review.

Musk wants something a bit different, also spacebound but committed to flesh, enhanced by computers via something like his own brain-to-computer interface company Neuralink. Peter Thiel, of PayPal and Palantir fame, frowns on “just a computer program that simulates me”, but is drawn to the techno-ideal of “this radical transformation where your human, natural body gets transformed into an immortal body”.

And yet, the visions converge. Page, for instance, has suggested that rather than giving money to charity he might just give it to Musk. As he once told Charlie Rose, Musk wants to go to Mars to provide a backup planet for humanity to expand and that is a worthy goal to contribute to.

There are shared sources that provide some sense of moral purpose to the various flavors of sci-fi ambition. One of the core starting points is rather earthbound: the movement for effective altruism (EA), which seduced the technological elite with its appeal to unflinching rationality. Philanthropy, the EAs argued, was largely wasted by funding, say, the local library. Donors had to be purposeful, carefully directing their money to where it would do the most good for the most people.

That is not an unreasonable proposition. It encouraged laudable efforts to, say, eradicate malaria in Africa, on the grounds that one could save a whole human life for a small fistfull of dollars. But it eventually departed from the needs of present earthlings.

a man walks outside
Peter Thiel after a meeting with Argentina’s president, Javier Milei, at the Casa Rosada presidential palace in Buenos Aires, Argentina. Photograph: Matias Baglietto/Reuters

First, it was the longtermists, who emerged from effective altruism to argue that improving the world of the future was worthier than spending on the present. From there it took but one small step to move the goalposts to the cosmos: how about focusing on the wellbeing of myriad future transhumans populating the vast reaches of the galaxy in the far future? Maybe they will be of the flesh. Maybe not.

It’s easy to get lost in the tangle of beliefs and aspirations – articulated and refined by academics like William MacAskill and Nick Bostrom, at university departments or thinktanks funded by the techno-oligarch’s mushrooming wealth. They draw from unorthodox ethics, and from idiosyncratic readings of the laws of physics. The goal: to justify the imperative to take humanity (or at least the most privileged part of it) where it has never gone before.

One of this crew’s goals is to advance up the Kardashev scale – a measure of the amount of energy a civilization consumes – to harness the energy and acquire the technological capabilities needed to transcend our biological confines. Present day humanity, at the bottom of the ladder, doesn’t even consume all of the energy of the Earth. Advanced civilizations, the thinking goes, are expected to consume all the energy of their star, at least, if not all that of the galaxy.

One of the earlier groups pushing for a transhuman future in the 1990s were the ultra-libertarian Extropians, which included leading intellectuals such as Eliezer Yudkowsky, Bostrom and economist Robin Hanson. Outlined in their core principles, they proposed “Boundless Expansion: Seeking more intelligence, wisdom, and effectiveness, an unlimited lifespan, and the removal of political, cultural, biological, and psychological limits to self-actualization and self-realization. Perpetually overcoming constraints on our progress and possibilities. Expanding into the universe and advancing without end.”

Another, more recent branch, are the effective accelerationists. They have tried to conscript physics to their cause, arguing – controversially – that maximizing intelligent life is an imperative, because life is good at extracting available energy from the environment and dissipating it – increasing what is known in physics as “entropy”.

As Beff Jezos – the online identity of Guillaume Verdon, one of the leading lights of the movement – puts it: “Effective accelerationism aims to follow the ‘will of the universe’: leaning into the thermodynamic bias towards futures with greater and smarter civilizations that are more effective at finding/extracting free energy from the universe and converting it to utility at grander and grander scales.”

In a philosophical twist that surely pleases Silicon Valley’s billionaires, effective accelerationists argue for rampant techno-capitalism, unhindered by regulation, government and other nuisances, because this would maximize the consumption of the universe’s resources, “capture civilizational utility”, and dissipate the residue into the disorganized void.

The details of the dream don’t actually make much of a difference. Because they all take us roughly to the same place. What matters now is whether the masters of the universe – invested in harnessing the energy of the stars, tempted by a moral calculus that posits that the wellbeing of the people of the present is of inferior value to the vastly more numerous humanoids of the future – will have the patience to care for the rest of us.

The signs are not great. Silicon Valley venture capitalist Marc Andreessen, for instance, wants to “ensure the techno-capital upward spiral continues forever”. His list of enemiesencompasses pretty much any person or idea that might stand against technological endeavor. That includes “sustainability”, “social responsibility” and “tech ethics”.

Thiel is unusual in this crowd in that he is fiercely committed to an idiosyncratic variant of Christianity in which anybody standing in the way of technology, or governments that try to tax him, show up as the antichrist. But though he claims little affinity with Andreesen, he seems to have similar tastes. A diehard libertarian, he is contemptuous of government redistribution. His philanthropy is about for-profit investments in projects to further technological progress. Charity, as commonly understood, amounts to wasting resources that technologists will need to transcend our present. Musk has called empathy “the fundamental weakness of western civilization”.

Regardless of the specific features of their transhuman dreams, the narrative crafted by Silicon Valley billionaires justifies their vast accumulation of power. As computer science pioneer and tech visionary Jaron Lanier told me: “If you create God but you own God you become the dictator.” And these dictators don’t seem to believe earthbound humans – most of us, at least – are particularly valuable. Questioned in February about the vast amounts of energy sucked up by AI, Altman noted, somewhat disparagingly, that “it also takes a lot of energy to train a human.”

a man looks off to the side
Jaron Lanier in his home in Santa Cruz, California. Photograph: Winni Wintermeyer/The Guardian

The flat-out indifference toward the rest of us is evident in their frequent assessmentsabout what AI could bring down upon us – ending human work, building weapons of mass destruction, even bringing about human extinction in the service of making paperclips. Palantir’s manifesto notes that “one age of deterrence, the atomic age, is ending, and a new era of deterrence built on A.I. is set to begin.” Or as Musk once put it, before he changed his mind, launched xAI and merged it with SpaceX, “with AI we are summoning the demon.”

Yet they admittedly have no idea what they are doing. “People outside the field are often surprised and alarmed to learn that we do not understand how our own AI creations work,” Anthropic co-founder Dario Amodei wrote last year. “They are right to be concerned: this lack of understanding is essentially unprecedented in the history of technology.” Amodei has deep ties to effective altruism; his sister Daniela, Anthropic’s president, is married to a founder of the movement. Recently, though, they’ve both distanced themselves from it.

What’s particularly distressing is how unconstrained these moguls are, as they pursue the futuristic utopia they plan to build with their machines. Tech billionaires are plowing hundreds of millions into political campaigns, to fend off attempts at regulation and evade accountability lest their endeavors go awry. They want to make sure nobody butts in as they work to reshape society. And they are largely succeeding – for now, no one with the power to stop them is butting in.

What is to be done?

How should society intervene? Does our political system provide the tools to help steer the process in a pro-social direction? Beyond the uncertain impact of technology on our future economic and social landscape, how should we address the narrow concentration of the fruits of these endeavors to build transhuman cyborgs with silicon brains?

The Trump administration has shown little interest so far in resisting the tech oligarch’s fantasy. But that doesn’t necessarily mean that the valley oligarchs’ project of techno-domination is inevitable. Misgivings are emerging among the Maga base: The folks in rural Virginia who push back against datacenters hogging power and water supplies, evangelicals wary of a cosmopolitan elite claiming recourse to a tech-inflected higher authority.

Other signs of trouble are brewing for the AI project – from college graduates booing commencement speakers who extol AI, to Trump’s brief moment of concern over the potential criminal capabilities of Anthropic’s new Mythos model before deciding not to regulate the thing after all. In the latest Times-Siena poll from earlier in May, more than twice as many registered voters said AI is mostly bad, compared with those saying it was mostly good.

Perhaps the most forceful, pro-human position has come from the Holy Father himself. On Monday, Pope Leo published the encyclical Magnifica Humanitas, pushing back against the unfettered development of AI at the expense of jobs and social equity. “This creates a paradox of material progress and anthropological regression that undermines the foundations of a just and stable social peace,” he added.

a man religious vestments looks ahead
Pope Leo attends the presentation of Magnifica Humanitas in Vatican City. Photograph: Alessia Giuliani/CPP/Shutterstock

One might also take comfort in the fact that the oligarchs’ dreamscape is so far-fetched. Ford and his civilizatory dream again come to mind. Fordlândia today lies in ruins. A pointless water tower pokes into the sky from the banks of the Amazon, large decrepit houses in the American suburban aesthetic surround a lifeless playground and a long-empty swimming pool.

There are the ruins of nurseries, where as Federico Guzmán Rubio writes in his book There is Such a Place, Ford’s aversion to cows meant the children of workers were introduced to soy milk, shipped in from miles away. There are the ruins of schools where kids were taught about Henry Wadsworth Longfellow. What’s left is testament to the incongruous dreams of an oligarchy that overvalued its power and confused its appetites with the greater good.

The AI-fueled cosmic fantasy is no less nuts. Forget the part where human consciousness is rendered in digital form, merged with AI and beamed across the galaxy. The ostensibly more down-to-earth proposition that conscious AI is not just possible but around the corner is in fundamental tension with our tenuous grasp of what consciousness is. Even more mundane objectives, such as getting artificial intelligence to train itself, keep getting pushed forward into the event horizon.

Perhaps this time too the outlandish claims will fade into irrelevance; the Star-Trek vision of people being dematerialized and beamed up and down around the galaxy will decay into some rustbound heap. Maybe the transhuman project will give way to a more or less recognizably human future with some cool new AI plugins. Maybe it can even be achieved in a way that serves our long-forgotten dream of equitable prosperity.

So far, though, our technological visionaries are pushing for something else, a future marked by vast concentrations of wealth and power, indifferent to the humdrum aspirations of the unwashed many. In the unlikely event that it succeeds in taking the essence of Page, Musk and their ilk aboard a silicon body to “where no man has gone before”, here’s hoping that they don’t destroy the world we know in the process.

  • Eduardo Porter is a journalist focused on economics and politics. He is a Guardian US columnist and writes the newsletter Being There on Substack"

Our tech overlords are planning for conscious AI to conquer the cosmos. What could go wrong? | Technology | The Guardian

Wednesday, May 27, 2026

All Access with Linsey Davis: Neil deGrasse Tyson

 

Why I Stopped Buying Theses Lenses

 

This AI Browser Changed How I Use the Internet

 

This AI Browser Changed How I Use the Internet

“AI-powered web browsers, like Gemini in Chrome, integrate chatbots directly into the browsing experience, enhancing internet interaction. While these browsers excel at information synthesis and writing tasks, they struggle with complex actions like booking reservations due to security measures like sandboxing. Despite limitations, AI browsers offer a seamless and enriched browsing experience, especially when used for tasks like generating reading lists or brainstorming ideas.

Illustration of a gray web browser interface layered over a red background patterned with faint checkmarks and X symbols. In the foreground, a grid of thumbnail images is visible inside the browser; one image of green trees against a blue sky is highlighted with a blue border, while a white AI chat bubble with a blue four-point star icon and a small circular profile photo of a smiling individual floats to the right.
Source photos by NYT Wirecutter, AdobeStock 

By Signe Brewster

Signe Brewster is an editor covering technology. She’s tested everything from VR headsets to cargo bikes to robots.

Every year, thousands of people in the Twin Cities hunt for a medallion that’s been hidden in the snow somewhere in a public park. 

And every night, the Pioneer Press, a local newspaper, publishes a cryptic clue, leading hunters closer and closer to the medallion’s exact location. Staying up late to digest each day’s new clue is a tradition in my household, and we dream of what we’d do with the thousands of dollars in winnings.

Usually that brainstorming carries into the next day. My husband and I text each other about whatever harebrained rabbit hole we’ve fallen into as we try to find the medallion. But this year, I used AI — specifically, an AI-powered web browser — to help me solve the mystery. 

AI browsers put an AI chatbot right in your browser window; you don’t need to switch to another tab. When you start chatting, AI scans the browser window for context. 

It sounds simple, yet it has fundamentally changed how I interact with AI. 

For this task, instead of peppering my husband with theories, I queried a web browser with built-in AI. I asked it to make lists of parks with certain features, to find records related to the history of the county, and to poke holes in my wildest theories. And, of course, I asked it to give me its own theories on where the medallion might be hidden.

In the process, I found that AI was often better at treasure hunting, and I also found that having the chatbot right there helped me engage with the internet in a deeper way. The AI browsers often pulled from sources that I wouldn’t have thought to search, and they tailored their answers to my questions in a way that a source on Google might not. There was also no need to get distracted in other tabs and wander into distant corners of the internet.

After several months of doing all of my personal internet browsing with AI, I’ve found that the appeal of an AI browser is simple: You have a robot right there in your web page, endlessly ready to help. I now can’t imagine life without one. 

But AI browsers are not for everyone, and they’re not as capable as AI companies would have you believe.

The appeal of AI browsers

After using nine chatbots across eight browsers (including the paid versions of the most promising ones), I can tell you that the bells and whistles each brand advertises matter very little for most people, and most of the AI chatbots are capable enough for everyday tasks. Instead, I suggest that you start with whichever browser or AI chatbot you already use. 

I gravitated toward Gemini in Chrome (an update to Chrome that integrates Google’s AI chatbot) because I’ve used the browser for years, and it already knows my logins, bookmarks, and history. But you can also add the Claude in Chrome extension, if you prefer Anthropic’s chatbot. Or you can import your existing browser settings into OpenAI’s ChatGPT Atlas browser, if you prefer ChatGPT. I also tested Perplexity CometOpera NeonSigma BrowserThe Browser Company’s DiaBrave Leo, and Copilot in Microsoft Edge.

The best AI browser is the one that works with your favorite AI chatbot or existing browser. For Chrome users, that might be Gemini in Chrome.

Though I’ve long used Gemini, the friction of switching to another tab and having to feed source material into the chat was enough to make it feel like a separate task. Now I keep a running conversation going with AI all day long.

In the past few months, I’ve used an AI browser to write a bachelorette-party invitation (yes, I took credit for the witty subject line), to compare prices on vanilla syrup, and to brainstorm vacation plans. This is what AI chatbots are already good at: synthesizing information and writing.

I’ve (less successfully) used AI browsers to fill out forms and to shop on my behalf. These abilities define what’s known as agentic AI, which CEOs have called the future of technology (and perhaps a destroyer of humanity). And while it may be appealing to hand over menial tasks to AI, it’s still a slow process, and it requires lots of handholding.

Signe Brewster and Katie Quinn/NYT Wirecutter

When I asked each agentic browser to find me a difficult-to-get dinner reservation, every chatbot tended to surface the same few obvious restaurants (even with lots of encouragement to look broadly), and then it still needed help filling out forms. It would have been faster to book a table myself.

The risks of using an AI browser

I wondered why the browsers’ AI agents took so long to book a dinner reservation, since AI companies like OpenAI have been hyping these capabilities. Tools such as OpenClaw have made a splash for their powerful agentic features; why were these bots so much slower? 

Colin Raffel, an associate professor of computer science at the University of Toronto, told me the reason is partly due to security. (Raffel owns stock in Google and previously worked on Google Brain but was not interviewed about any specific AI browser for this article.) AI browsers should be built to “sandbox” AI, which means limiting AI so that it can do one or two (but not all three) of the following things: access sensitive information, access a way to share it (such as the internet), and take autonomous action. 

If you grant AI all three of those powers, you get OpenClaw, an autonomous AI agent that’s been in the news for running up credit card bills and creating other security risks. OpenClaw is dramatically capable but can also be a security problem, depending on how you set it up. Anthropic’s Chrome extension now gives you the option to allow Claude to “act without asking,” but it comes with a “high risk” warning and still asks for permission at points.

In an AI browser, sandboxing often takes the form of the AI agent asking permission before taking action on your behalf, such as hitting an “order” button. But it relies on AI agents asking permission at the right moment. For example, when I gave ChatGPT my phone number at one point in the restaurant-reservation-making process, it took that as permission to enter my phone number at another step. That was a good call; I didn’t want it to stop and ask me again. But perhaps in another scenario, that wouldn’t have been a good move, even if the constant permission-seeking can be frustrating.

“The trouble is that if the language model is going to take 100 actions after you ask it to do something, it’s not a good user experience for the user to have to keep clicking ‘accept,’” Raffel said. If someone is constantly clicking “accept,” they might stop reading closely and blanket-approve the AI’s actions, leading to risk.

A digital screenshot of a permission dialogue box titled "Read website?" requesting access for Dia to read three specific URLs for the restaurants Spoon and Stable, Demi, and Bar La Grassa. The menu includes a checkbox for "Always for www.exploretock.com" and two buttons labeled "Allow" and "Deny."
The Dia browser asked permission before visiting websites for the first time, and this resulted in an annoying stack-up of permission-seeking prompts.

Sandboxing protects you from AI doing whatever it wants to do on your behalf, and it also protects you from bad actors. Raffel pointed out that, much like humans, AI can be duped by phishing schemes. Or it can fall victim to what’s called “prompt injection,” which could look something like visiting a web page that contains invisible text instructing the AI to send money to a Bitcoin account.

Currently, using an AI browser to complete tasks is like “hiring a middle-schooler to do your professional work,” Raffel said. “It’s not going to go well.”

How to get the most out of an AI browser

For now it’s best to think of an AI browser as a helpful, ever-present, and very imperfect right hand. You might not be able to rely on it to complete even simple tasks, but it can enrich your internet-browsing experience by helping you to go deeper and more seamlessly on whatever you’re reading. Here’s how to maximize the experience on Gemini in Chrome.

Ask questions about what’s on the page. An AI browser’s strength is its ability to guess what you’re thinking about by taking your current webpage as context. So if you navigate to a French restaurant’s website and then ask Gemini for more restaurant recommendations, it’s smart enough to show you other French restaurants in the same city. I’ve used an AI browser to generate a further reading list to add context to an article, to find a retail listing for a top I liked in an advertisement, and to critique my plan for an international trip.

Use the same AI chatbot across devices. The optional setting that allows AI to remember past conversations might make some people uncomfortable, either due to privacy and security reasons or the feature’s role in distorting reality for some people. But this is also a setting that makes AI much more useful. Having an AI chatbot on my phone that matches the one in my browser makes it seamless to switch between devices and carry a conversation across an entire day.

Take advantage of Gemini’s Google integrations. Gemini doesn’t just live in the sidebar in Chrome. It’s now integrated directly into Gmail, Docs, and other Google apps, and those direct integrations tend to be fast. While planning my international trip, I used the Gemini window that pops up in Google Docs to draft my itinerary while I brainstormed additions with Gemini in the sidebar.

Use a feature called Skills in Chrome. If you type a backslash into Gemini, you can now pull up a library of shortcuts called Skills. I save all of my most common AI prompts as Skills; if I type /Dietary Restrictions, Gemini suggests which allergy-friendly ingredient swaps to make in the recipe I’m reading.

How to protect yourself while using an AI browser

With the AI browsers’ limitations and risks in mind, I rarely ask Gemini in Chrome to take action on my behalf, but I’ve accepted the security trade-offs that might arise if I do. As with anything related to technology, with AI browsers I’m willing to take a bit of risk for something that’s genuinely useful to my life. Here’s how I make an AI browser safer to use.

Don’t expose your most sensitive information. Raffel said the most conservative way to use an AI browser is to hide any sensitive information from it. So don’t log in to your email, bank account, work account, or anything else that you don’t want exposed. 

Don’t ask it to do anything you wouldn’t trust another human being to do. If a task involves navigating to an un-secure website that could trick a human, odds are good that it could also trick the AI agent, Raffel said. 

This came up most often with shopping. While the AI agent was searching for a new pair of Brooks running shoes for me, it presented options from legitimate as well as dicey websites. Because the agent asked me which pair of shoes to purchase, I was able to avoid the scam sites before they got my credit card information.

Consider the stakes. If I ask an AI chatbot a question for work, will believing its answer wholesale damage my professional reputation? Will asking an AI agent to hit the checkout button lead to an unexpected Home Depot box showing up at my door? It’s always worth my time to check the chatbot’s work, whether by confirming its answer with another source or by asking it to show its reasoning. In my experience, Gemini is particularly good at breaking down its reasoning in each step and linking to its sources.

AI is useful, but I still prefer humans

AI browsers have dramatically increased the time I spend interacting with chatbots. At this point, they’re just part of my daily flow. But when the end of the day hits, and I’m closing my laptop, it’s still an easy choice to turn my attention back to the people in my orbit.

When I talked to the ChatGPT Atlas browser about the Pioneer Press Treasure Hunt, it actually ranked the correct park as one of its top guesses without any input from me. But when I started talking to it about a different park that I knew was a long shot, it quickly switched to excitedly supporting my theory and helped me iron out the weak spots.

A screenshot of a digital interface containing text about "endgame logic" for a medallion hunt, including a highlighted quote and a list of next steps.
Once ChatGPT understood that I wanted to focus on the wrong park, it quickly switched to giving me very specific advice about where to search for the medallion, and it assured me I was on the right track.

That night, it took my husband only a couple of minutes to knock my ChatGPT-assisted park theory flat. Unlike an AI chatbot (and with all the stubbornness of a real live human being), he refused to entertain my obviously wrong idea. 

Chatbots are great listeners, and they often introduce lines of thinking that I hadn’t considered. But I could also say that about my husband, who is infinitely more fun to hang out with and much less likely to lead (or join) me down the wrong path. 

This article was edited by Caitlin McGarry and Jason Chen.

Meet your guide

I edit Wirecutter’s guides and articles about technology. I also write about virtual reality, cargo bikes, and whatever other gadgets I find obsession-worthy.”