Anthropic has taken significant strides with its computer-use agent, an advanced AI feature that allows its Claude model to perform tasks directly on users’ screens. This feature enables Claude to interact with various applications, using screenshots to decide and execute actions such as moving cursors, clicking, and typing. This functionality is appealing for both personal and professional use cases, like building websites or editing spreadsheets, distinguishing Claude from other AI agents that are limited to specific applications or browsers.
Competing closely, Google’s “Project Jarvis” targets similar goals by assisting users in web-based tasks. However, unlike Anthropic’s broader application functionality, Jarvis focuses primarily on Google’s Chrome browser. While Anthropic prioritizes tasks that could benefit software engineers or business users, Google’s agent is more geared toward consumer automation, such as purchasing items or booking travel. Both companies face competition from OpenAI, which has been developing its agent with similar capabilities, though its current applications lean toward assisting in coding and software development tasks. The competition underscores the rapid evolution of AI agents as companies aim to increase the versatility of AI systems in managing more complex, screen-based workflows.
Anthropic, the third-largest component in the Prime Unicorn Index, is currently valued at over $24 billion, including secondary pricing from Caplight. The company is reportedly seeking new venture funding just months after a Series D round valued it at $17.65 billion. In the highly capital-intensive AI race, where competition with giants like OpenAI is fierce, securing substantial funding is essential for sustaining rapid innovation. Anthropic’s continuous fundraising highlights the significant costs of advancing AI models, which require robust computing resources and deep R&D investment.
See how Anthropic has performed against the Prime Unicorn 30 Index below.