Kimi Web Bridge promises human-like browser automation for AI agents

Kimi.ai has just rolled out Kimi Web Bridge, a Chrome extension it says lets agents browse like humans—searching, scrolling, clicking, and filling forms. It also touts support for tools like Claude Code, Cursor, and Codex, though early replies question reliability and security.

Kimi Web Bridge promises human-like browser automation for AI agents

TL;DR

  • Kimi Web Bridge: Browser extension for agent web actions—searching, scrolling, clicking, typing, task completion
  • Tool compatibility: Supports Kimi Code CLI, Claude Code, Cursor, Codex, Hermes, and other tools
  • Availability: Distributed via Chrome Web Store and the company’s website
  • Example workflows: Multi-platform search at scale; auto-fill results into a spreadsheet
  • Example workflows: Build an entire Google Form via chat; convert daily workflows into reusable “skills”
  • Linked to K2.6 multimodal: Agent opens, navigates, and “replicates” websites; commenters questioned reliability, state, security, and Firefox support

Kimi.ai has introduced Kimi Web Bridge, a browser extension the company claims lets an agent "interact with websites like a human" by searching, scrolling, clicking, typing and completing tasks. In the launch post, Kimi.ai also states that the extension supports Kimi Code CLI, Claude Code, Cursor, Codex, Hermes and other tools, and that it is available through the Chrome Web Store and the company’s website.

The account posted several examples of what the extension is supposed to handle. Those include searching across multiple platforms at scale and auto-filling results into a spreadsheet, creating an entire Google Form through chat, and turning daily workflows into "reusable skills." Kimi.ai also linked the release to K2.6’s multimodal capability, claiming an agent can "open a website, navigate through it, and replicate it."

Much of the early response focused on the practical limits of browser agents rather than the announcement itself. Commenters asked about handling stateful, multi-step tasks, logins, dynamic pages, cookie and permission boundaries, tab switching, multi-tab execution, Firefox support and whether the extension works through other tools such as opencode. One commenter also asked for proof on real commerce sites such as Etsy, eBay and Vinted, while another raised open-source concerns.

Other replies positioned the release as a tool for cross-CLI workflows, with users suggesting it could reduce tab-juggling across parallel Claude Code and Codex sessions. Several comments also framed the move as part of a broader push toward agent-driven browser automation, though the launch post itself stops short of offering technical details on reliability, state handling or security boundaries.

Source: Kimi.ai on X

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