Announcement

July 1, 2025

Introducing Browser Use:

A Massive Unlock for OpenServ Agent Teams

Green Fern

This week we unveiled a game-changing addition to OpenServ: browser control capabilities for agent teams, available now through the Browser Use Agent.

This isn’t just another agent drop. Browser control fundamentally transforms what’s possible with AI agents by allowing them to interact with the web just like humans do — navigating sites, filling forms, clicking buttons, and executing complex workflows.

What This Means

Until now, agents have been largely limited to working with online data through APIs and MCPs.

While powerful, this approach requires custom integration work for every service and is limited to what those APIs and MCPs expose.

Browser capabilities break these constraints. Agents can now:

  • Navigate to any website, just like a human

  • Fill out forms and submit information

  • Click through multi-step processes

  • Extract information from unstructured web pages

  • Monitor websites for specific changes

  • Execute transactions across services

The Web as an API

This effectively turns the entire web into an API for your agents. Any website or web application becomes accessible without requiring specialized integrations.

For crypto and DeFi use cases, this is particularly powerful. Agents can now:

  • Monitor charts and price movements across multiple sources

  • Analyze token fundamentals from various analytics platforms

  • Track governance proposals across DAOs

  • Execute trades on DEXs with complex parameters

  • Bridge assets between chains at optimal times

  • Monitor liquidity pools and yield strategies

Infrastructure that Matters

This bridges the gap between AI capability and real-world action. It solves the “last mile” problem of agent utility.

We built OpenServ to orchestrate agent teams that work together to solve complex problems. Browser capabilities extend this vision by allowing those teams to operate directly in the digital environments where work happens.

Security and Control

We’ve designed this system with security as the primary concern:

  • All browser sessions run in isolated, secure environments

  • Agents operate with explicit permissions you define

  • All actions are logged for transparency

  • You maintain complete control over what your agents can access

The Broader Implications

This capability fundamentally changes what it means to build agent systems:

  1. Accessibility: Any developer can now build agents that interact with existing web services without needing API access.

  2. Composability: Browser capabilities combined with our multi-agent architecture mean complex workflows across multiple sites become possible.

  3. Adaptability: As websites change, agents can adapt their interaction patterns without requiring code changes.

  4. Democratization: This levels the playing field between those with API access and those without, opening up innovation to more builders.

The Next Frontier

Browser capabilities represent a fundamental shift in what is possible with OpenServ agent teams.

By closing the gap between AI intelligence and real-world action, we’re moving closer to truly autonomous systems that can handle complex workflows without constant human supervision.

This isn’t about replacing humans — it’s about extending human capability by automating the repetitive, time-consuming aspects of web interaction so people can focus on things like strategy and creativity.

The infrastructure we’re building is designed to support the next generation of agent applications — ones that don’t just provide information, but actually get things done.

Welcome to the next phase of agent evolution.

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Footnotes:

1. OpenServ achieves state-of-the-art performance on SWE-bench Verified, which evaluates AI models’ ability to solve real-world software issues. See the appendix for more information on scaffolding.
2. OpenServ AI understands customer history1 and context to offer tailored responses.
3. OpenServ achieves state-of-the-art performance on SWE-bench Verified, which evaluates AI models’ ability to solve real-world software issues. See the appendix for more information on scaffolding.