is a London-based reporter at The Verge covering all things AI and Senior Tarbell Fellow. Previously, he wrote about health, science and tech for Forbes.
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After launching to subscribers willing to fork out hundreds of dollars a month this summer, Perplexity’s agentic AI browser Comet is now available to everyone for free. “The internet is better on Comet,” the company says, promising to remain free forever as it styles the browser as a serious challenger to Google’s Chrome.
Comet puts AI at the heart of the browsing experience. It incorporates Perplexity’s AI search tools and a personal AI assistant that, in the company’s words, actually “travels the web with” users, instead of being “tacked onto a traditional browser.” It’s supposed to make surfing the web simpler and help you with tasks like shopping, booking trips, and general life admin. To borrow the company’s words again: you “get more done.”
The AI-powered browser launched in July, though was only available for users who subscribed to the $200 per month Perplexity Max plan. Later, Perplexity expanded this to include “select” subscribers of its cheaper Pro plan and lucky invitees on what the company says is now a millions-strong waitlist. No subscription at all will be needed to use Comet going forward, the company says.
As well as its browser, Perplexity is making its Comet Plus content available for free too. The program, which launched in August as a standalone $5-a-month subscription, gives users access to curated news content in a scheme CEO Aravind Srinivas likened to Apple’s Apple News+.
Perplexity is not alone in its quest to bring AI to the internet. Google has infused Gemini into Chrome, The Browser Company — the makers of the Arc browser — is going all in on Dia, and Opera just launched its own AI browser, Neon.