The great AI war has only just begun. First lagging behind, the American giant Google is now catching up with its competitors, OpenAI and Anthropic. His latest project, Jarvis, was leaked before its time…
The next evolution of AI could be even more impressive than what we’ve seen since the release of ChatGPT.
Appointed JarvisGoogle’s new project could throw a big wrench into the pond.
The latter would, in fact, be capable of surf the web for usdirectly via the Chrome browser.
Google gives a glimpse (by mistake) of Jarvis, the future of AI
Two weeks ago, Anthropic unveiled a new version of Claudeson IA phare.
Its particularity? The ability to control the user’s PC independently. Imagine the mouse cursor moving on its own on the screen following a voice or text command… A little scary, right?
We are still far from total control, fortunately!
However, this is the direction that AI companies seem to be heading, including Google.
Appeared in the form of a extension on the Chrome Web Store for a few hours, Jarvis promises increased autonomy for the user.
This artificial intelligence assistant would be able to shopping online or from fill out forms instead of humans.
To do this, the robot analyzes the screen, then makes its decisions according to the context and the user’s orders.
Some were able to download this extension before it disappeared from the Chrome Web Store. Unfortunately, no one was able to use it due to lack of adequate permissions in the Google Chrome browser…
Towards human-free web browsing?
The race for AI shows no sign of stopping any time soon. It even seems to be constantly accelerating.
Google could thus present the first official release of Jarvis in Decemberalong with its new AI model Gemini 2.0.
For its part, OpenAI would also work on a robot capable of controlling the user’s machine.
Between Google, Anthropic and OpenAI, the war rages. However, all this excitement around AI likely to take over our PCs leaves us wondering…
There arehuge risks to let a machine incapable of consciousness and reasoning manage the IT of any household. Will generative AI companies implement effective protections ? Where will the lure of profit be stronger?
Hopefully the answer won’t be as disappointing as we expect…
Jarvis will soon come to the fore and could also present, for example, a leap forward foraccessibility for disabled people.
Sources : Clubic, Frandroid