The SKT model is using the adot Chrome extension. /Courtesy of SKT

SK Telecom (SKT) announced on the 1st that it has launched the "adot Chrome extension" that allows users to conveniently utilize the multi-LLM agent features of the AI agent "adot" in the Google Chrome browser.

Through this extension, users can enter keywords on search sites such as Google, Naver, Daum, and Nate, and check the key summarized results provided by adot on the right side of the search results page. This feature is only available in the PC web environment and provides summarized results using one of the adotX (A.X), Perplexity Sonar, GPT 4o mini, or Claude 3.5 Haiku models. Users can check summaries with other models through the "conversing with various LLM models in adot" feature.

SKT expects that this extension will significantly enhance the convenience of search service usage, emphasizing that users can check summarized key information directly without visiting a separate AI service page after a search. Additionally, SKT plans to add features such as document generation or video summarization in the future.

On the 27th, SKT added the AI service "Liner" to adot, which has been gaining popularity in North American college markets. Liner is characterized by providing reliable sources in search results, and adot users can use "Liner Pro" for free. Liner currently has over 11 million users, and the number of questions from users in the U.S. is rapidly increasing.

SKT has continuously enhanced customers' AI experience convenience by adding various AI models, following the addition of Google's AI model "Gemini 2.0 Flash" in March. Recently, in a report on the "Top 100 Global Generative AI Services," adot was ranked 15th in the AI web sector, receiving high evaluations globally.

Kim Yong-hoon, head of the adot business division at SKT, noted, "We have made it easier for users to utilize AI services through the adot Chrome extension," and added, "We will continue to develop various AI-related features to maximize users' convenience in their daily lives."