Deal highlights push into AI-powered productivity tools
Atlassian (TEAM) announced it will acquire The Browser Company, a New York–based startup known for its AI-driven browsers, in a $610 million cash deal expected to close by December. The move signals Atlassian’s ambition to expand beyond its core collaboration software into the increasingly competitive browser market.
Founded in 2019, The Browser Company has tried to reimagine how people work online, competing with tech giants like Google Chrome and Apple’s Safari. Its flagship product, Arc, debuted in 2022 with features such as customizable tab groups, a built-in whiteboard, and automatic archiving. More recently, it introduced Dia, a simpler browser in beta that allows users to chat with an AI assistant about multiple tabs at once.
Atlassian co-founder and CEO Mike Cannon-Brookes argued that traditional browsers are not optimized for modern digital work. “Whatever it is that you’re actually doing in your browser is not particularly well served by a browser that was built in the name to browse,” he said. He praised Arc’s ability to streamline his own workflow through better tab management and organization.
Still, The Browser Company struggled to achieve mass-market adoption. Co-founder and CEO Josh Miller acknowledged that Arc’s advanced tools attracted a niche audience, more akin to professional-grade software than consumer apps. That limited uptake eventually led the startup to halt new feature development, sparking speculation about whether Arc might be released as open source.
For Atlassian, the acquisition could help integrate browsing into its suite of workplace tools, potentially making browsers more central to digital collaboration. As AI reshapes productivity software, the company’s bet reflects a broader trend: rethinking foundational technologies to better fit how people work today.
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