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Architecting Security for Agentic Capabilities in Chrome
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Chrome Security

Architecting Security for Agentic Capabilities in Chrome



A flow chart that depicts the User Alignment Critic: a trusted component that vets each action before it reaches the browser.

A flowchart illustrates an AI decision-making process on an e-commerce website. The process begins with user instructions and untrusted web content. A "Planner Model" determines the next action, and a "User Alignment Critic" reviews it. If the action is approved, it is executed on the website (for example, adding a t-shirt to the cart). If it is rejected, the planner stops or replans. The flowchart highlights the interaction between the different stages and the possible outcomes.

Iframes from origins that aren’t related to the user’s task are not shown to the model.

This image illustrates the difference between how a human user and an AI agent see the same webpage. The human user sees the entire page with all content, including banner ads. The AI ​​agent only sees the source frames relevant to its task, while non-essential content, such as ads, is hidden.

Illustrative example of when the agent gets to a payment page, it stops and asks the user to complete the final step.

This screenshot shows a web browser with an overlay window for an AI assistant called "T-shirt shopping." The assistant displays the steps it has taken to search for and add T-shirts to the cart based on the user's instructions. At one point in the process, the assistant pauses and indicates that it needs the user's help, offering a "Take over task" button. There is also a text field for the user to add further instructions. In the background, a clothing store webpage is visible, displaying a T-shirt and an "Add to cart" button.