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Google, OpenAI, and Anthropic are all making AI systems that will run your PC for you, doing online

Published on December 05, 2025

If you've been [[link]] hoping that AI is just going to a tech bubble that'll burst very soon, like 3D TVs (remember them?), you'll have to keep wishing as major players in the industry are charging ahead with new AI agents. Google, OpenAI, and Anthropic are all busy creating so-called computer-using agents (CUAs) that will take over your web browser and carry out various tasks at your behest.

Anyone who has used ChatGPT a lot will know that you get it to give you information on a research topic, summarise a document, fill in a form, and suggest items worth purchasing. However, you need to give the AI system all of the necessary documents and links to do this. The obvious next step in artificial intelligence is just to tell it what you want and it will scurry off and do everything for you.

Earlier this year, Reuters reported on OpenAI's project 'Strawberry' with the supposed aim of "enabling the company’s AI to not just generate answers to queries but to plan ahead enough to navigate the internet autonomously and reliably to perform what OpenAI terms deep research."

Last week, Anthropic announced that its latest LLM, Claude 3.5 Sonnet, can also be used to work a computer via its API: "[D]evelopers can direct Claude to use computers the way people do—by looking at a screen, moving a cursor, clicking buttons, and typing text." The company has a short promotional video demonstrating a potential use of the system.

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Would any of the AI companies reimburse you? I suspect not, and they will probably have very specific clauses in the user agreement that says you take full responsibility.

If that turns out to be the case (and it probably will be), then I can't see many tech-savvy people [[link]] agreeing to use a CUA. But such people pale in number compared [[link]] to those who use a PC every day but have no understanding of what's going on behind the scenes or the dangers of using them.

Surveys suggest that some people want stringent regulations put into place to restrict AIs from becoming all super-powerful. As word of CUAs begins to spread, I wonder if folks will want the same action taken against them. My instinct suggests that your average PC user will just see them as a handy tool and be oblivious to the cybersecurity and personal risks computing-using agents generate.

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