OpenAI's Operator Is Here to Do the Clicking and Typing for You
- OpenAI has launched an AI agent called Operator to assist with tasks like making reservations and ordering groceries, as highlighted in a demo video posted Thursday.
- Operator can handle multiple tasks simultaneously and is currently available in a limited preview for paying users in the U.S.
- The tool is based on the Computer-Using Agent model, combining GPT-4o's vision capabilities with advanced reasoning, but users have noted slow responsiveness and other issues.
- OpenAI plans to expand access to Operator beyond the U.S. and aims to enhance its generative AI tools for everyday use, according to the company's chief product officer.
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SCIENCE & TECH: OpenAI’s Operator is one more step towards AGI, but should we be worried about giving too much power to AI agents? – U-S-NEWS.COM
As expected, OpenAI has released its first autonomous AI agent, called Operator this week. Operator can act independently from you on your computer using a web browser doing pretty much anything that can be done in a web browser. So, it can perform tasks like booking a restaurant table or buying groceries. You just tell it what you want it to do, and off it goes like a faithful Internet-enabled butler that potters away until the task is complete…
OpenAI’s new Operator AI agent handles tasks — but with hiccups
This story incorporates reporting from PC Gamer, BGR, MIT Technology Review, Computerworld, TechRadar and newsbytesapp.com.OpenAI has released Operator, a largely autonomous AI tool designed to execute tasks on the internet based on simple text prompts. Operator stands apart by not only providing answers to queries but taking actionable steps to complete tasks. This AI agent aims to handle routine digital tasks such as scheduling appointments or…
Watch ChatGPT's Operator AI agent solve a CAPTCHA like a human
It's 2025, and we still have to deal with CAPTCHAs on the web, the online browsing disruption we never wanted and can't get rid of. Then again, CAPTCHAs are there to protect websites from abuse by malicious actors. With that in mind, it's pretty obvious why sites continue to use them. However, with the upcoming wave of AI agents that can browse the web and perform actions on our behalf, CAPTCHAs might become a thing of the past. That is, service…
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