Perplexity launches Comet, an AI-powered web browser

(techcrunch.com)

64 points | by gniting 3 days ago ago

76 comments

  • whyenot a day ago

    Wow, $200/month for the privilege of being monetized and tracked even more closely than Chrome does. Sounds like a real winner.

  • felarof a day ago

    We just launched an open-source alternative -- you can download today; use local LLMs with ollama and not pay $200/month.

    https://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=44523409

    • a day ago
      [deleted]
    • eGQjxkKF6fif a day ago

      Whats the outlook for Linux with that

      • felarof a day ago

        this is on our radar, we should have a linux build in 2-3 days!

        we have macOS and windows build as of now.

        • Tostino 15 hours ago

          Cool. Waiting on that to try it out.

  • Havoc a day ago

    Can't say I have much trust in any of these recent AI company launched browsers.

    They have a proven track record of not respecting people's data...

  • dang a day ago

    Recent and related:

    Perplexity Comet - https://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=44513769 - July 2025 (52 comments)

    Comet Browser by Perplexity - https://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=44511527 - July 2025 (14 comments)

  • qoez a day ago

    I've always wanted a browser with a subscription fee

  • senko a day ago

    I see multiple comments decrying the browser price.

    Have we collectively forgotten how to read?

    The browser is not $200/mo. It's available for free to those on the Max plan now, and will be rolling out to other plans.

    I imagine users on all those plans get some value out of Perplexity other than the browser.

  • kennywinker a day ago

    Comet, you say?

    Free slogan, courtesy of Joe MacMillan: “Search it, find it, comet”

    :)

    • mpeg a day ago

      AI isn't the thing, it's the thing that gets us to the thing

      • owlninja a day ago

        Comet, it makes your teeth turn green...

    • wetwater a day ago

      One of the best shows I've ever watched.

      • ConfiYeti 19 hours ago

        +1

        Halt and Catch Fire, if anyone is curious.

  • slacktivism123 a day ago

    Use case for LLM-infested Chromium wrapper?

    • ParetoOptimal a day ago

      Track everything users do and sell the data.

      https://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=44523226

    • garciasn a day ago

      Videos from Perplexity as well as YouTubers show what it's supposed to do: provide you an interface to simplify your research, evaluation, and execution of written instruction.

      For example: you're supposed to tell it to do something like, "plan my week for me including make me a menu plan, setup a grocery list and add everything I need to it, shop the list and allow me to pick it up on Sunday afternoon, and, in the meantime, plan for me 2 days of things to do." And supposedly, it will do all of these things for you automatically. I haven't tested it, but it basically this is intended to do all the things we've hoped AI would help us do--automatically. Will it be successful? Probably a bit better than we've come to expect, but it's nothing like we have built up in our minds.

      AI has been game changing for me in my work life, but I have yet to find it useful for things like I laid out above. Maybe that's changing and this is the first step toward that future.

  • phyzome a day ago

    Perplexing indeed.

  • oc1 8 hours ago

    << At launch, Comet will be available first to subscribers of Perplexity’s $200-per-month Max plan, as well as a small group of invitees that signed up to a waitlist.

    Boy i already pay Anthropic that. Now i should pay another 200 bucks to use an ai browser? On top of all these ai saas that want another 20 bucks.

  • glimshe a day ago

    So... The main feature is the homepage setting and an AI tag that everyone else has had doe months?

  • GlitchRider47 a day ago

    IMO this is not a true launch, just a beta only available to those who pay top dollar.

  • freedomben a day ago

    Maybe off-topic, but there are lots of rumors flying - will Apple acquire Perplexity?

    • havaloc a day ago

      Apple should acquire Perplexity - it's a pretty great product and combined with some privacy enhancements it's a win, and they could likely integrate it better than Google could with Gemini.

      • criddell a day ago

        > it's a pretty great product

        Is it?

        I was gifted a pro subscription for a year and after trying it for a few weeks I instead signed up for an Anthropic Claude subscription (which I pay $20 / month for) and I use that all the time.

        What am I missing about Perplexity?

        • kimos 14 hours ago

          I signed up and I no longer use most other websites. I only use Kagi for basic searches, where I want to get to a destination and not get information.

          Perplexity “does the googling for me” and summarizes or seeks for me. No more skimming and synthesizing. No more crafting search queries and comparing. Ask a question, no matter how obscure or specific, and it fetches the real time answer.

          Honestly not much has ever so drastically changed how I use the internet.

        • Agraillo a day ago

          As a cultural synthesizer ("create a sketch...") or translator (i.e., from human to programming) perplexity is as good as the others and maybe worse. But I like it as being an alternative semantic web search engine. Search engine because most of the time the facts are referenced at the end of the paragraphs and when it fails to insert them, I usually ask to expand. It's a new feeling after all those years of PageRank dominance. For example, It sometimes creates a paragraph with a reference to some recent research that according to the PageRank logic should be at the bottom (because almost nobody cites it). It's like the relevance was reborn. Once it was in a primitive sense of the early AltaVista, then Google killed it with PageRank, now when an engine really understands the question, the answers might become relevant in a new sense while being tangential to the reputations of the sources

        • felarof a day ago

          +1, I bought perplexity pro annual subscription last year, and hardly use it now.

          chatGPT+o3 search is much better.

          My typical workflow is fire the question to Google AI mode and chatGPT+o3 at the same -- AI mode is fast but meh answer, chatGPT is slower but pretty good answer always.

    • okdood64 a day ago

      As I understand it they don't even make any competitive foundational models themselves? Isn't that the kind of talent Apple is after?

    • felarof a day ago

      Even if apple buys, would they kill Safari? I don't think so -- comet will have to die in that case.

    • alwillis a day ago

      Not just Perplexity but Anthropic as well, which would my preference.

      • whywhywhywhy 17 hours ago

        If you like Anthropic's models shouldn't Apple buying them be something you don't want to happen?

        Is Apple gonna want to be in the coding model in a dropdown in Cursor business? Not too sure they're interested in that.

        • alwillis 15 hours ago

          Would I prefer Anthropic to stay independent and go on to be a real alternative to Google, Microsoft and xAI? Certainly.

          While I don't believe Apple wants to be in all of Anthropic's current businesses, the crown jewels are the models and employees, which is want they want.

      • dawnofdusk a day ago

        Is Apple supposed to be one of the kind and benevolent megacorporations?

        • tempest_ a day ago

          No public company can be "benevolent"

          Apple still makes 10s of billions a year letting Google be the default search, they have a vested interest in maintaining that revenue.

          Plus whatever "values" they have will go right out the window if the golden iphone shaped Goose ever stumbles.

        • alwillis a day ago

          Plus Apple and Anthropic appear to be collaborating [1].

          [1]: "Apple Partners With Anthropic for Claude-Powered AI Coding Platform" -- https://www.macrumors.com/2025/05/02/apple-anthropic-ai-codi...

        • criddell a day ago

          I would assume basic functionality would be included but advanced functionality would require a subscription to Apple One (or whatever it's called now).

          So I wouldn't describe them as kind and benevolent, more that they want to make products people will pay for.

        • alwillis a day ago

          To the degree that it matters, I believe Apple and Anthropic values are more in alignment than say, Apple and OpenAI.

      • layer8 a day ago

        We do not need any more big-tech concentration than we already have, rather less.

  • lvl155 a day ago

    I don’t get it. Didn’t they launch this already a few month ago?

    • evo_9 a day ago

      You’re probably thinking of The Browser Companies Dia Browser (replaced Arc). Came out last month, same AI focus.

  • symisc_devel a day ago

    Imagine paying $200/mo for this privacy nightmare

  • a day ago
    [deleted]
  • rvz a day ago

    Right after the "launch", most of the people that are praising the browser are either employees, paid influencers or fans of the CEO.

    I am yet to see a normal "non-tech" person use Perplexity after being a longtime ChatGPT user.

    • panarchy a day ago

      How do we know it isn't just Vomet making comments about itself?

  • vpShane a day ago

    Perplexity CEO says its browser will track everything users do online to sell ‘hyper personalized’ ads

    https://techcrunch.com/2025/04/24/perplexity-ceo-says-its-br...

    • latexr a day ago

      A web browser which tracks everything you do and you have to pay for the privilege…

      • swed420 a day ago

        It's kind of wild how the west draws this distinction:

        If China does it while being responsible and taking into account cost/benefits on overall human well being, it's Creepy Big Brother Communism.

        If the US does it and charges money for it (or makes it 'free' by selling your personal info to untrustworthy companies / selling you junk you don't need) it's an innovative futuristic privilege.

        Cold War propaganda was incredibly effective through generations.

        edit: changed "If China does it for free" to "If China does it" since it had some distracting assumptions

        • roboror a day ago

          Can you give an example of what China produces for free to the benefit of overall human well being, as well as instances of people calling Comet "an innovative futuristic privilege?"

        • ericmcer a day ago

          no one in this thread is calling the tracking in this innovative. Additionally the government doesn't do anything for "free", if you make 200k a year you are paying $8k/mo or $10/hour just to live in the USA.

          • swed420 a day ago

            > no one in this thread is calling the tracking in this innovative

            I didn't say otherwise. But clearly Perplexity (and Google etc) feels there is a market fit for this, so I'm referring to those customers and whatever future customers might come. This is also nothing new. See: basically all existing social media and its consequences.

            > Additionally the government doesn't do anything for "free"

            I reworded this since it wasn't the point, and had some assumptions made about usage.

        • GlitchRider47 a day ago

          I think it's worth pointing out that in China it is the government doing it, whereas in the US it is private companies (in this particular context).

          • swed420 a day ago

            Um, obviously? You seem to have missed the point.

            People ought to be most interested in the final outcome of each example.

            • notahacker a day ago

              Yeah. However wild some of the "America is the land of the free, China is a hellhole" takes are, there is a difference between a tracking system designed to try to sell you holidays and a tracking system used to identify political dissidents.

              • swed420 a day ago

                > there is a difference between a tracking system designed to try to sell you holidays and a tracking system used to identify political dissidents

                I have a feeling this assumption will age poorly.

                • GlitchRider47 a day ago

                  Why? People are openly dissident in the US.

                  • swed420 a day ago

                    On the HN front page today:

                    U.S. will review social media for foreign student visa applications

                    https://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=44524749

                    History tells us it won't stop here.

                    • GlitchRider47 a day ago

                      Background checks on visa applicants is a farcry from digital surveillance to identify political dissidents. Although, I would agree with the notion that the US government has been increasingly becoming a surveillance state, but not nearly as pervasive as China.

    • internetter a day ago

      This reads like the onion

    • bicepjai 14 hours ago

      This makes me rethink their subscription I have. So we just have to assume any search we do on perplexity is tracked like hunting dogs ?

    • MangoToupe a day ago

      Ah. Well this explains why they didn't go with the pitch that AI can be a sufficient adblocker, which strikes me as the obvious use of AI.

    • itsoktocry a day ago

      Just pitching to VCs...why would any person want that?

  • SudoSuccubus a day ago

    [dead]