Mozilla recently released the Nightly version of FirefoxAdd new features, allowing users to add artificial intelligence services such as OpenAI's ChatGPT, Google's Gemini, Hugging Face's HuggingChat, or Mistral AI's Le Chat Mistral to the browser sidebar.
Users can quickly call their preferred chatbot by simply right-clicking their mouse or touchpad to use functions such as content summary, translation, or summary of key points.
All chatbots can be customized by users, but are currently only available on an experimental basis. You can enable the relevant experimental content through the browser settings project to quickly call the chatbot function in the Firefox browser.
The chatbot currently used in Firefox is not integrated into the core browser operation. This means that Mozilla is not working with a specific industry, but rather allows users to choose the chatbot service they prefer to use. This is unlike Google's native integration of its own Gemini in the Chrome browser, and Microsoft's integration of its Copilot service in its Microsoft Edge browser.
Mozilla is pitching this as a way for you to try out chatbots and see which one works best for you (or to learn if you even want to use a chatbot at all). "All of these models are still being developed and improved," the organization noted in a blog post. "No one is perfect, and each of them is good at some things but not others." Mozilla added that it will refine the chatbot experience before introducing it into the beta and release versions of Firefox.
The organization is following several other browser makers in introducing chatbots into their products. Microsoft and Google, of course, have already introduced Copilot and Gemini to Edge and Chrome, respectively. Companies like Opera and DuckDuckGo have also dabbled in these areas.




