OpenAI has launched Operator, a largely autonomous AI agent designed to take your simple text prompts and turn them into real-world tasks completed via the internet. In theory, you can ask it to do almost anything that's possible via a web browser.
The AI assistant will first be made available to subscribers of ChatGPT Pro, a $200 a month subscription, and eventually roll out into the free version of ChatGPT.
OpenAI is delivering on its promise of making 2025 the year of agentic AI. Last week, the company launched Tasks for ChatGPT, which lets users automate future prompts like sending
Can the $500B Stargate Project secure U.S. AI dominance? This is a 21st-century moonshot the U.S. cannot afford to miss.
OpenAI is testing an AI agent called Operator, which can do online tasks like filling out forms and making reservations.
OpenAI's Operator AI agent uses advanced reasoning and GUI interaction to complete web tasks, now in research preview.
With its MIT license and ultra-low costs, DeepSeek could be an appealing and cost-effective option for enterprise adoption.
Instead of relying on specialized APIs, the system uses screenshots for visual input and virtual mouse and keyboard actions to complete tasks.
It was recently revealed that OpenAI secretly funded and accessed data related to the FrontierMath AI benchmark. The controversy raises questions about the legitimacy of
OpenAI is putting its focus on AI infrastructure with Stargate at a time when rivals like China's DeepSeek are closing the gap on its AI models.
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