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Home » Chrome introduces AI-driven auto browse to handle multi-step online actions
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Chrome introduces AI-driven auto browse to handle multi-step online actions

By technologistmag.com28 January 20264 Mins Read
Chrome introduces AI-driven auto browse to handle multi-step online actions
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We have all been there: it is late at night, you are trying to plan a vacation or find a specific pair of boots you saw on Instagram, and suddenly you realize you have forty-three tabs open in Chrome. Your laptop fan is screaming, you have lost track of which flight was the cheapest, and you are ready to give up. The modern web is incredible, but it is also a chaotic mess of friction, pop-ups, and endless comparison.

Google knows this, and with their latest announcement, they are trying to fix it by fundamentally changing the way we surf the internet. Meet “Auto Browse,” a new feature powered by Gemini 3 that promises to turn the web browser from a passive window into an active participant in your digital life.

The end of “Tab Fatigue”

Announced in their latest product blog, Auto Browse isn’t just another chatbot that summarizes a Wikipedia article for you. We have seen plenty of those. This is different because it actually does things. Currently being tested in the desktop version of Chrome, this feature uses the Gemini sidebar to take over the heavy lifting of navigation.

Imagine you are trying to revamp your wardrobe. Instead of manually searching for “vintage denim jacket,” clicking through five different retailers, filtering by size, and comparing shipping costs, you just upload a photo of a style you like. You tell Auto Browse, “Find me something like this under $50 that ships to my city.” Then – and this is the cool part – the AI actually goes out and navigates the pages. It clicks the links. It reads the descriptions. It sifts through the options. It basically acts like a digital personal assistant, coming back to you with a curated list of options so you don’t have to do the grunt work.

This represents a massive shift in how we think about the internet. For the last twenty years, the relationship has been simple: we type a query, Google gives us a list of blue links, and we do the rest. Auto Browse tries to cut out the middleman. It is moving us away from “assistive” tools that just sit there and wait for input, toward “agentic” AI that can perform multi-step workflows on its own.

Think about how much time students spend just gathering sources for a paper, or how long it takes to cross-reference specs when buying a new laptop. Auto Browse is designed to flatten that entire process into a single interaction. It consolidates the information gathering, the comparison, and the decision-making support into one fluid motion.

But is it safe?

Of course, the idea of an AI clicking around the internet on your behalf sounds a little bit terrifying. Google seems acutely aware of this. In their announcement, they emphasized that safety and user consent are baked into the core of the product. The AI isn’t going to go rogue and max out your credit card; for significant actions, especially anything involving money or personal data, it has to ask for your permission. It is a delicate balancing act between the convenience of automation and the necessity of human control.

Chrome

Right now, Auto Browse is still in the testing phase, but the implications are huge. If this works as advertised, it could make the “10 blue links” search results page obsolete for complex tasks. It means spending less time fighting with user interfaces and more time actually getting things done.

As Google refines this tech and eventually brings it to mobile, we are looking at a future where the browser isn’t just a tool for viewing the web – it is an engine for interacting with it. Whether you are a bargain hunter, a researcher, or just someone who hates having too many tabs open, this is a glimpse into a much more streamlined, automated future for the internet. The days of “doomscrolling” through search results might finally be numbered.

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