Split-screen comparison thumbnail titled "Hide Google AI Overviews - The 1-Click Fix (Chrome & Firefox)". The left side shows a Google Search page with a blurred AI Overview bubble marked with a red "X" and labeled "Before: AI Clutter". The right side shows a clean search page marked with a green checkmark and labeled "After: Clean Search".

Best Extensions to Hide Google AI Overview (Ranked & Tested)

TL;DR The fastest way to remove Google AI Overviews is installing a browser extension like “Hide Google AI Overviews” or “10 Blue Links.” Google says AI Overviews are “a core Google Search feature” and that “features cannot be turned off.” The official workaround is selecting the Web filter, which “displays only text-based links without features like AI Overviews.” Quick decision: Choose a CSS-hiding extension if you want to remove AI Overviews while keeping rich results like Maps/Images/News. Choose a Web/udm=14 solution if you want the most stable “classic links” view at the cost of losing many widgets by design. Quick Guide: Best Tools to Hide AI Extension / Tool Method […]

Gradient background in soft blue-to-pink hues with a centered ChatGPT Atlas icon—a navy rounded square featuring a blue flower-shaped bloom and white compass arrow—above bold headline text reading “Is the New ChatGPT Atlas A Chrome Killer?”

OpenAI Launches ChatGPT Atlas: An AI-Powered Browser to Challenge Chrome

On October 21 2025, OpenAI formally announced ChatGPT Atlas: a web browser built from the ground up with its chatbot, ChatGPT, integrated into the core experience. This new AI-native web browser is designed to rethink how people interact with the internet. Atlas combines traditional browsing with generative AI capabilities, promising a seamless experience that goes beyond search — into automation, memory, and intelligent task execution. This launch marks OpenAI’s most direct challenge yet to Google Chrome and other AI-enhanced browsers like Microsoft Edge, Dia/Arc, Perplexity’s Comet, and Brave. A Browser Built Around AI Atlas introduces a different approach to web browsing, built around AI as the default interface rather than […]

Logos of major web browsers on a gradient background, including Chrome, Dia, Opera Neon, Perplexity Comet, Brave, and OpenAI. Below the logos, bold white text reads: “The AI Browser War Begins: Can OpenAI Kill Chrome?”

OpenAI Is Building a Browser to Kill Chrome—And It Might Actually Work

OpenAI is preparing to launch its own AI-powered web browser, reportedly arriving within weeks. Built on Chromium and tightly integrated with ChatGPT, the browser is designed to compete directly with Google Chrome and reshape how people interact with the web. This move is about more than user experience. It’s a strategic push to take control of the same data stream that fuels Google’s core business. Chrome, used by over 3 billion people, captures vast amounts of behavioral data—searches, clicks, and browsing patterns—all of which feed into Google’s advertising engine. OpenAI wants to reroute that stream. With a growing base of over 500 million weekly ChatGPT users, the company is betting […]

Illustration of a large, worn-out Google Chrome logo floating in space, with a fiery comet heading toward it. Text on the image reads, “Is Comet About to Crush Chrome?” suggesting a dramatic clash between Perplexity’s new AI browser and Chrome. The background features a dark starry sky with glowing particles and meteor trails.

Perplexity Launches Comet: A $200 AI-Powered Browser That Could Kill Chrome

On July 9, 2025, Perplexity AI officially launched Comet, a new AI-powered web browser designed to reimagine how people interact with the internet. Marketed as the world’s first “AI-native browser,” Comet introduces features like persistent context memory, seamless AI assistance, and integrated task automation — aiming to replace the traditional tab-cluttered, search-centric web experience. The browser is currently limited to users subscribed to Perplexity Max, the company’s $200-per-month premium tier, with a broader invite-only rollout expected later this summer. According to CEO Aravind Srinivas, support for Android is “coming soon”, while Windows and macOS are supported from day one. Comet is built on Chromium, allowing users to keep their existing Chrome extensions, bookmarks, and settings. […]