Google accidentally confirmed the existence of a new AI. It manages to take control of the browser

Google Chrome gets AI Jarvis extension

A recent leak confirmed the existence of a new artificial intelligence agent called Jarvis, which is being developed by Google. The company itself is behind the leak and it was allegedly an accidental leak. The company has already taken action and AI Jarvis has been removed from the extensions store.

Google got away with artificial intelligence

We previously informed you that Google is working on a new artificial intelligence called Jarvis. It is an AI agent that will be integrated into the Google Chrome web browser and will help users with common tasks.

The main goal of the Jarvis AI agent is to increase user productivity while simplifying the tasks normally performed while browsing the web. The official introduction of AI Jarvis should take place in December this year. However, Google did not pay much attention to the AI ​​agent.

Jarvis will run on AI GeminiJarvis will run on AI Gemini

Jarvis will run on AI Gemini | photo: Unsplash

Jarvis got on the first computers

AI Jarvis made a brief appearance in the official Chrome extension store. Although Google quickly removed it after the accidental leak, some users managed to download the add-on. Although they have downloaded the add-on, it is not functional, so the question is how the add-on will work when Google releases it in its final form. However, the leak confirms the previous information and it seems that AI Jarvis is almost in its final version.

Gemini is behind everything

The Jarvis add-on is supposed to be powered by Gemini artificial intelligence, which is also supported by Google. It will help users, for example, with online shopping, site searches or flight bookings. This is a similar tool to the one recently introduced by Anthropic as part of the AI ​​Claude model.

Apple’s Apple Intelligence and Microsoft’s Copilot+ Recall are also expected to offer similar functions. So it’s nothing groundbreaking. Anyway, this add-on can be a useful tool for anyone who uses Google Chrome to browse the web.

Jarvis works by taking screenshots as you browse the web. Based on them, it evaluates what the user might want. It can then respond to commands quickly and even before the user enters them. The privacy issue is not yet clear, but we believe that Google will secure this add-on enough to preserve the user’s privacy.

Source: mobilizujeme.cz