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news Perplexity CEO says its browser will track everything users do online to sell ‘hyper personalized

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Perplexity doesn’t just want to compete with Google, it apparently wants to be Google.

CEO Aravind Srinivas said this week on the TBPN podcast that one reason Perplexity is building its own browser is to collect data on everything users do outside of its own app. This so it can sell premium ads.

“That’s kind of one of the other reasons we wanted to build a browser, is we want to get data even outside the app to better understand you,” Srinivas said. “Because some of the prompts that people do in these AIs is purely work-related. It’s not like that’s personal.”

And work-related queries won’t help the AI company build an accurate-enough dossier.

“On the other hand, what are the things you’re buying; which hotels are you going [to]; which restaurants are you going to; what are you spending time browsing, tells us so much more about you,” he explained.

Srinivas believes that Perplexity’s browser users will be fine with such tracking because the ads should be more relevant to them.

“We plan to use all the context to build a better user profile and, maybe you know, through our discover feed we could show some ads there,” he said.

The browser, named Comet, suffered setbacks but is on track to be launched in May, Srinivas said.

He’s not wrong, of course. Quietly following users around the internet helped Google become the roughly $2 trillion market cap company it is today.

That’s why it built a browser and a mobile operating system. Indeed, Perplexity is attempting something in the mobile world, too. It’s signed a partnership with Motorola, announced Thursday, where its app will be pre-installed on the Razr series and can be accessed though the Moto AI by typing “Ask Perplexity.”

Perplexity is also in talks with Samsung, Bloomberg reported. Srinivas didn’t flat-out confirm that, though he did reference on the podcast the Bloomberg article, published earlier this month, that discussed both partnerships.

Obviously, Google isn’t the only one watching users online to sell ads. Meta’s ad tracking technology, Pixels, which is embedded on websites across the internet, is how Meta gathers data, even on people that don’t have Facebook or Instagram accounts. Even Apple, which has marketed itself as a privacy protector, can’t resist tracking users’ locations to sell advertising in some of its apps by default.

On the other hand, this kind of thing has led people across the political spectrum in the U.S. and in Europe to distrust big tech.

The irony of Srinivas openly explaining his browser-tracking ad-selling ambitions this week also can’t be overstated.

Google is currently in court fighting the U.S. Department of Justice, which has alleged Google behaved in monopolistic ways to dominate search and online advertising. The DOJ wants the judge to order Google to divest Chrome.

Both OpenAI and Perplexity — not surprisingly, given Srinivas’ reasons — said they would buy the Chrome browser business if Google was forced to sell.

Source: https://techcrunch.com/2025/04/24/p...ers-do-online-to-sell-hyper-personalized-ads/
 
On one hand, I like ads that are personalized to me so that, if I do want to buy something or am capable of buying something, the items that I want are displayed to me and not weird Temu products or the likes. On the other hand, I hate ads and would prefer to seek out what I want to buy, and when I want to buy it, on my own accord.

The last issue I have with this is what I find most concerning: Data privacy. I go out of my way at times to disguise who I am, and it's not because I want to necessarily hide something bad that I'm doing; I just don't think it's anyone's business what I'm doing, or anyone's right to log that and build a profile of me with.

I liken privacy to having a wired telephone conversation with someone and an intermediary phone in the middle that anyone could pick up and listen to the conversation at any time. While the conversation isn't anything I'd be ashamed of if it came out, I just have a problem with that, as I believe 99.99% of people would, even if what they're talking about isn't bad.

Srinivas believes that Perplexity’s browser users will be fine with such tracking because the ads should be more relevant to them.
I think this is a good point that I made already with tailored ads.

I just believe that it's a slippery slope into something that could be far worse if requisite in the wrong hands. The bottom of the slope is a profile of every single user that could help shape AI into determining the outcome of a new user's next action based on their first, very well leading to a Minority Report (2002) type system or even foreign advisories gaining access to the data to know exactly which targets would be best and when, neither of which would be something I'd like to find out.

Unfortunately, I think that most users are naive or desensitized to having their privacy violated all the time that this might take off, and Perplexity will essentially become an arm of (a or) the government at some point.
 
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