Google just dropped something pretty wild: Project Mariner, its first AI agent that can actually take action on the web. Powered by the Gemini AI, this agent can control your Chrome browser move the cursor, click buttons, fill out forms basically do everything you do on websites. But here’s the catch: it’s not just about making browsing easier it’s part of a whole new way we’ll interact with the internet.
What’s the Big Deal?
The idea behind Project Mariner is that, instead of you clicking through pages, typing out search queries, and filling in details, the AI does it for you. You tell it what you need, and it handles the steps to get you there. It’s like having an assistant who knows exactly how to browse, shop, book a flight without you lifting a finger. Please Note Claude has a similar option too
Imagine you want to create a shopping cart based on a list of items. You just give the agent the list, and it takes over. In a demo, the AI visited Safeway, searched for groceries, added them to the cart—all without human hands touching the keyboard. But it wasn’t all smooth sailing: the process was slow (about 5-second delays between each action), and sometimes it had to ask you for clarification, like “how many carrots do you want?”
Hold on, it has Limits
Even though the AI can browse for you, it’s still not handling everything. No checkout meaning it can’t fill in your credit card or billing info. Also, it doesn’t accept cookies or agree to terms of service, which is Google’s way of letting you keep more control over your privacy.
Another limitation: the agent only works on your active Chrome tab. If it’s working, you can’t really do much else. The goal here, though, is transparency Google wants you to always know what your AI is up to
Why It Matters
Project Mariner could change the way we interact with websites entirely. In the past, if you wanted to shop online, you’d visit a retailer’s site. With this AI, the agent navigates for you, which could make users less engaged with the sites themselves. For publishers and retailers, this could have a big impact on their traffic and their business models.
Google is aware of the shift and calls it a “fundamentally new UX paradigm shift.” It’s not just about browsing websites anymore it’s about letting AI do the browsing. And as this tech evolves, who knows? You might not even need to visit websites at all.
It’s an exciting glimpse into a future where AI isn’t just smart, its hands on, taking action, and doing the work for us. The web might never be the same.