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ChatGPT is coming for one of Google’s smartest Chrome features

OpenAI brings ChatGPT to Chrome to challenge Google's Gemini Side Panel

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OpenAI is expanding ChatGPT beyond its website with the launch of a new Chrome extension that can understand the contents of the webpage you’re viewing. The extension allows users to ask questions about a page, summarize articles, explain complex concepts, and even kick off longer AI-powered tasks without leaving their browser.

The move positions ChatGPT as a direct competitor to Google’s Gemini in Chrome, which introduced similar context-aware browsing features earlier this year. While both tools aim to bring AI directly into web browsing, they take slightly different approaches to productivity and automation.

ChatGPT enters a browser AI race Google started

According to OpenAI, the new extension gives ChatGPT access to the active webpage, allowing it to answer questions using the page’s content as context rather than requiring users to copy and paste text into a separate chat window. Users can request summaries, explanations, translations, or ask follow-up questions while continuing to browse.

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The extension also supports longer-running tasks through ChatGPT’s agent capabilities, enabling users to delegate more complex requests directly from the browser. Rather than interrupting a browsing session, OpenAI’s goal is to keep AI assistance available alongside the page being viewed.

Google has been pursuing a similar vision with Gemini in Chrome, which lives inside Chrome’s side panel. Like ChatGPT’s extension, Gemini can summarize webpages, explain difficult concepts, answer questions about the current tab, and generate text without forcing users to switch tabs. It also uses the contents of the active webpage to provide context-aware responses.

However, Gemini currently offers deeper integration with Google’s ecosystem. Beyond webpage analysis, it can work across up to 10 browser tabs, summarize information from multiple pages simultaneously, and connect with Gmail, Google Calendar, Google Drive, and other Workspace apps. Google has also begun rolling out Auto Browse, an agentic feature that can complete multi-step tasks such as navigating websites, filling forms, and making bookings with user approval.

Context-aware AI is changing how we browse

For users, the biggest benefit is convenience. Instead of copying paragraphs into an AI chatbot, both browser assistants bring conversational AI directly into the browsing experience. They can explain research papers, summarize lengthy news articles, answer questions about documentation, draft emails based on webpage content, or simplify technical information in real time.

The competition also signals a broader shift in how AI assistants are evolving. Rather than existing as standalone chatbots, they are becoming browser-native productivity tools that understand what users are looking at and eventually what they are trying to accomplish.

OpenAI’s Chrome extension brings ChatGPT much closer to Google’s browser experience, but Google still holds an advantage through its tight integration with Chrome and Workspace. As both companies continue adding agentic capabilities, the battle is shifting from building better chatbots to creating smarter browsers that can read, understand, and eventually act on behalf of users.

Moinak Pal
Moinak Pal is has been working in the technology sector covering both consumer centric tech and automotive technology for the…
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