Maybe there’s a middle ground where a small local model can roll with the variations in a site that would break a script, while saving the per token costs?
amelius 1 hours ago [-]
The problem: I don't trust extensions one bit.
rvz 4 hours ago [-]
Aren't there just many ways for the website to just break the automation?
Does this work on sites that have protection against LLMs such as captchas, LLM tarpits and PoW challenges?
I just see this as a never ending cat and mouse game.
arjunchint 2 hours ago [-]
The bigger goal is to build and maintain a global library of popular automations. Users can also quickly re-record and recreate the scripts to update.
Since it runs inside your own browser, there should be no captchas or challenges. On failure it can fallback to our regular web agent that can solve captchas.
Big picture wise with the launch of Mythos it might just become impossible for websites to keep up, and they will have to go like Salesforce and just expose APIs for everything.
acoyfellow 4 hours ago [-]
It is. They are saying “we are willing to chase the mouse for you for money”.
ashish004 1 hours ago [-]
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quarkcarbon279 1 days ago [-]
[dead]
Rendered at 01:11:23 GMT+0000 (Coordinated Universal Time) with Vercel.
Does this work on sites that have protection against LLMs such as captchas, LLM tarpits and PoW challenges?
I just see this as a never ending cat and mouse game.
Since it runs inside your own browser, there should be no captchas or challenges. On failure it can fallback to our regular web agent that can solve captchas.
Big picture wise with the launch of Mythos it might just become impossible for websites to keep up, and they will have to go like Salesforce and just expose APIs for everything.