San Francisco, USA – July 19, 2025 – Aravind Srinivas, CEO of Perplexity AI, has taken aim at tech giant Google, calling it a “giant bureaucratic organization” hampered by “too many decision-makers and disjoint teams.” The remarks, made during a Reddit “Ask Me Anything” session on July 16, 2025, highlight the intensifying competition in the AI-driven web browsing landscape, where Perplexity’s innovative Comet browser is challenging Google’s dominance.
Srinivas argued that Google’s reliance on its ad-driven business model, which generated $198 billion in search revenue last year, is at odds with the future of AI-powered browsing. “Google relies on users clicking ads. But if AI agents do the browsing, there are fewer human eyes on those ads,” he stated, suggesting that Google faces a critical choice: protect its lucrative advertising revenue or fully embrace AI-driven innovation. He pointed to Google’s Project Mariner, an AI-powered browsing feature, as “similar but quite limited” compared to Perplexity’s Comet, predicting that Google will likely adopt or copy Comet’s features in the future.
Perplexity’s Comet, launched on July 9, 2025, is an AI-native browser designed to prioritize user experience over advertising. It integrates Perplexity’s AI search engine and the Comet Assistant, which automates tasks like summarizing emails, managing tabs, and navigating webpages. Currently available to premium subscribers for $200/month or $2,000/year, with a free version planned, Comet aims to redefine browsing by letting AI handle searches and decision-making, allowing users to focus on outcomes rather than sifting through tabs. Srinivas emphasized that Comet, built on Google’s open-source Chromium engine, reflects a user-first philosophy, contrasting with Google’s ad-centric approach.
The critique comes as Perplexity, valued at $14 billion as of June 2025, continues its rapid growth. The company, founded in 2022 by Srinivas and co-founders Denis Yarats, Johnny Ho, and Andy Konwinski, reported processing 780 million queries in May 2025, with a 20% month-over-month growth rate. Srinivas envisions Comet as a “cognitive operating system,” integrating AI seamlessly into daily browsing. He also noted strong user demand for ad-free experiences, saying, “We underestimated people’s willingness to pay for utility and independence.”
Despite leveraging Chromium, Srinivas did not shy away from highlighting Google’s structural challenges. “Google’s massive organizational framework hinders its agility in the rapidly evolving AI space,” he remarked, echoing sentiments from industry observers who see smaller, agile companies like Perplexity gaining ground. However, Srinivas acknowledged Google’s contributions, noting that Comet wouldn’t exist without Chromium.
The comments have sparked debate in the tech community, with some praising Perplexity’s bold vision and others questioning whether it can sustain its challenge against Google’s vast resources. Perplexity’s subscription-based model, which generated $150 million in annualized revenue recently, contrasts with Google’s ad-driven approach, positioning it as a formidable rival in what Srinivas calls the “Browser War III.” The company is also reportedly in talks to raise up to $1 billion, potentially doubling its valuation to $18 billion.
As the AI browser race heats up, Srinivas’s remarks underscore a broader industry shift toward user-centric, AI-driven solutions. Whether Google will adapt its model or continue to hedge, as Srinivas suggests, remains to be seen. For now, Perplexity’s aggressive push with Comet signals a new chapter in the battle for internet search and browsing supremacy.