Cursor, the company that provides an artificial intelligence-integrated development environment, recently gained attention from the industry after suggesting that it had developed a fully functional browser using its own artificial intelligence agents, which is known as the Cursor AI-based development environment. In a series of public statements made by Cursor chief executive Michael Truell, it was claimed that the browser was built with the use of GPT-5.2 within the Cursor platform.
Approximately three million lines of code are spread throughout thousands of files in Truell’s project, and there is a custom rendering engine in Rust developed from scratch to implement this project.
Moreover, he explained that the system also supports the main features of the browser, including HTML parsing, CSS cascading and layout, text shaping, painting, and a custom-built JavaScript virtual machine that is responsible for the rendering of HTML on the browser.
Even though the statements did not explicitly assert that a substantial amount of human involvement was not involved with the creation of the browser, they have sparked a heated debate within the software development community about whether or not the majority of the work is truly attributed to autonomous AI systems, and whether or not these claims should be interpreted in light of the growing popularity of AI-based software development in recent years.
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