When OpenAI unveiled ChatGPT Atlas on October 21, the world was promised a new kind of browsing experience – one where you could talk to the web. Atlas, an AI-powered browser with ChatGPT 5 model built-in, tries to reimagine the humble address bar as a conversational interface. You could ask it to summarize a web page, compare flight prices across tabs, or even book a table for two – all without typing a single search query.
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But while ChatGPT Atlas boasts layers of privacy controls – no file access, no local code execution, sensitive-site safeguards, and the reassuring ability to “watch what your AI is doing in real time” – the latest OpenAI launch came with a shadow. The very same day, Brave Browser’s security team dropped a report that