Google has introduced a major upgrade to its Chrome browser, transforming it into an AI-powered workplace assistant using its Gemini models. Announced at Cloud Next 2026, the new feature—called “auto browse”—brings agent-like capabilities directly into the browser, enabling users to automate a wide range of everyday tasks.
With auto browse, Chrome can understand the context of open tabs in real time and assist users in completing tasks such as research, data entry, scheduling meetings, booking travel, and comparing information across multiple websites. This allows employees to offload repetitive, web-based work and streamline workflows without switching between tools.
The system is designed to act as a collaborative assistant rather than a fully autonomous agent. Google emphasized that a “human in the loop” remains essential, meaning users must review and approve actions before they are finalized, ensuring accuracy and control over automated processes.
In practical use cases, the AI can extract key data from documents, populate CRM systems, summarize candidate profiles before interviews, or analyze competitor websites—all directly within the browser environment. This reflects a broader shift toward embedding AI into existing workplace tools rather than requiring separate platforms.
Alongside productivity features, Google is also enhancing enterprise security within Chrome. The browser will now help IT teams detect unauthorized AI tools, compromised extensions, and unusual “agent activity,” addressing rising concerns around shadow AI and workplace data security.
The development highlights Google’s strategy of making the browser a central hub for AI-driven work, positioning Chrome not just as a browsing tool but as an intelligent co-worker capable of executing complex, multi-step tasks within daily workflows.




