Good Morning, here’s what you’ll learn today. OpenAI just dropped a brand new browser called ChatGPT Atlas, and it might change how you surf the web. You’ll also hear about a massive cloud deal that’s shaking up the AI race, Netflix doubling down on AI for your next binge, and a huge study showing AI chatbots are getting a news wrong half the time (i would know).
In Today's Edition
Today’s AI Tool Breakdown: ChatGPT Atlas

Quick overview
ChatGPT Atlas is OpenAI's new web browser with AI baked right in. You get a sidebar that lets you ask ChatGPT about any page without switching tabs. Think of it like having a smart assistant riding shotgun everywhere you browse.
How to use it
Visit chatgpt.com/atlas and download the app (Mac only for now).
Open the installer and drag Atlas into your Applications folder.
Launch Atlas and sign in with your ChatGPT account.
Import your bookmarks, passwords, and history from Chrome or Safari if you want.
Click the "Ask ChatGPT" button in any tab to open the sidebar and start asking questions about the page.
For paid users, try Agent mode by clicking the agent button to let ChatGPT handle tasks like shopping or research.
Copy/paste starter script
Open any webpage, highlight text you want help with, and click the ChatGPT icon that pops up. Ask it to summarize, rewrite, or explain the content and watch it work.
Real-world use cases
Summarize long articles or research papers without reading every word
Draft or clean up emails directly in Gmail without leaving your inbox
Get quick answers about products while shopping online
Let Agent mode book trips or add groceries to your cart hands-free
Pro tips
Turn on Browser Memories in settings so Atlas remembers pages you visited and can find them later
Use Incognito mode for sensitive browsing—it logs you out and saves nothing
Toggle page visibility off for banking sites so ChatGPT can't see them
Free vs paid
Free: Full browser with ChatGPT sidebar, search, and all basic features.
Paid: Agent mode (Plus at $20/month or Pro at $200/month) lets ChatGPT automate tasks like shopping, booking, and research.
Alternatives
Perplexity Comet — faster for research-heavy work with live web citations
Google Chrome with Gemini — if you want AI search without switching browsers
Arc Browser — clean interface with AI tools but less automation power
Quick demo video
OpenAI's New Atlas Browser Is Here
Today In AI News, The Top 4 Stories (And Why They Matter)

This matters because: Atlas puts ChatGPT directly in your browser so you can ask questions, edit text, and automate tasks without copy-pasting between tabs.
Quick summary: OpenAI released its first web browser on Tuesday for Mac users. It has ChatGPT in a sidebar on every page, plus an Agent mode that can shop, book flights, or research topics for you. It's like your browser finally learned to help you get stuff done.

This matters because: This deal would give Anthropic the computing muscle to compete with OpenAI while making Google a major power player in the AI infrastructure race.
Quick summary: Google is negotiating a cloud deal with AI startup Anthropic worth tens of billions. The deal would let Anthropic use Google's custom AI chips to train its Claude chatbot faster and cheaper. Think of it like renting extra brainpower.

This matters because: AI is now helping Netflix pick what you should watch next, create special effects, and sell more ads—all to keep you glued to your screen.
Quick summary: Netflix announced Tuesday it's fully committed to using AI across its platform. The company is using generative AI to improve recommendations, speed up film production, and personalize ads. They even used AI to bring back characters in a new Adam Sandler movie. It's like Netflix hired a robot assistant for everything.

This matters because: If people rely on AI for news but it's wrong almost half the time, trust in information breaks down—and that's bad for everyone.
Quick summary: A new study from 22 public broadcasters found AI chatbots like ChatGPT and Gemini misrepresent news in 45% of responses. They mess up facts, cite sources incorrectly, and mix opinion with truth. Google's Gemini had the worst score at 72% errors. It's like playing telephone with a robot that forgets half the message.
Thats All For Today!
For all questions, comments, concerns, or if you want us include anything specific - feel free to reply to this email! We will answer 😄

