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ZDNET's key takeaways
AI browsers are powerful, but not necessarily secure.
Experts warn of rising prompt injection and data theft risks.
Use AI browsers carefully and protect your data.
This year has certainly been the year for artificial intelligence (AI) development.
With the sudden launch of OpenAI's ChatGPT, businesses worldwide scrambled to implement the chatbot and its associated applications into their workflows; academics suddenly had to begin checking student submissions for AI plagiarism; and AI models appeared for everything from image and music generation to erotica.
Also: Is OpenAI's Atlas browser the Chrome killer we've been waiting for? Try it for yourself
Billions of dollars have been poured into not only AI-powered chatbots, but also large language models (LLMs) and niche applications. AI agents and browsers are now the next evolution.
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