Resolution criteria
Leo's agentic AI browsing is currently available only in the Brave Nightly channel behind an opt-in feature flag. This market resolves YES when agentic AI features that allow the browser to navigate websites, execute search queries, extract and organize information, and automate multi-step workflows are released to Brave's stable/general release channel (not Nightly).
Resolution will be determined by checking the official Brave browser release notes and product pages. The feature must be available to general users for free without requiring Nightly builds or experimental feature flags.
Background
Agentic AI emerged from user feedback and Brave's commitment to making AI fundamental to how browsers work. Brave outlined in its 2025 browser AI roadmap that agentic AI could research topics by visiting and analyzing multiple websites, compare products across different shopping sites, check for valid promo codes before purchases and summarize news. Brave's near-term plans include adding a task scheduling system that will let users create recurring tasks and schedule automated workflows.
Considerations
Giving an AI control of browsing could expose personal data or allow unintended actions; security measures are tricky to get right, and indirect prompt injections are a systemic challenge facing the entire category of AI-powered browsers, which is why Brave has chosen a careful approach to releasing AI browsing. Brave stresses that agentic AI browsing is "inherently dangerous" and shouldn't be used for critical operations, mainly due to prompt injection attacks and the potential for misinterpreting users' intent.