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Perplexity AI | |
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Initial release | December 7, 2022 |
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Website | perplexity.ai |
Perplexity AI, or simply Perplexity, is a web search engine that uses a large language model to process queries and synthesize responses based on web search results. With a conversational approach, Perplexity allows users to ask follow-up questions and receive answers with citations of their sources from the internet.[2]
Perplexity AI, Inc. was founded as a privately held company in 2022 by Aravind Srinivas, Denis Yarats, Johnny Ho, and Andy Konwinski. It launched its flagship search engine on December 7, 2022, and has since released a Google Chrome extension and an app for iOS and Android.[1][2][3] As of June 2025, the company was valued at US$14 billion.[4] It currently has around 700 employees,[5] and is headquartered in San Francisco, California, United States.[6]
A free and public version is available, but the paid Pro subscription allows users to choose from a variety of more advanced models, among other features.[1]
In August 2022, Perplexity AI, Inc. was founded by Aravind Srinivas, Denis Yarats, Johnny Ho, and Andy Konwinski, engineers with backgrounds in back-end systems, artificial intelligence (AI) and machine learning.[7]
In February 2023, Perplexity reported two million unique visitors.[2] By April 2024, Perplexity had raised $165 million in funding, valuing the company at over $1 billion.[8] As of June 2025, Perplexity closed a $500 million round of funding that elevated its valuation to $14 billion.[4] Investors in Perplexity AI have included Jeff Bezos, Tobias Lütke, Nat Friedman, Nvidia, and Databricks.[9][10][8] During Bloomberg’s Tech Summit 2025, Srinivas shared that the company processed 780 million queries in May 2025, experiencing more than 20% month-over-month growth, processing around 30 million queries daily.[11]
In July 2024, Perplexity announced the launch of a new publishers' program to share ad revenue with partners.[12]
On January 18, 2025, the day before the impending U.S. ban on Chinese social media app TikTok, Perplexity submitted a proposal for a merger with TikTok US.[13][14][15][16]
Perplexity works on a freemium model. It also offers a paid enterprise version.[8]
Perplexity summarizes the search results and produces text with inline citations[9] and also enables users to use Pages to generate customizable web pages and research presentations based on user prompts.[17]
The subscription-based Pro version provides access to an API[9] and also enables users to search both internal files and web content. It also has access to models like GPT-4.1, o4-mini, Claude 4.0, Grok 3 Beta and Gemini.[18] The company has also developed its own models Sonar (based on Llama 3.3)[19] and R1 1776 (based on DeepSeek R1).[20]
On November 18, 2024, Perplexity launched its shopping hub to attract users, backed by Amazon and leading AI chipmaker Nvidia. This will give users product cards showing relevant items in response to asked questions about shopping.[21]
Internal Knowledge Search enables Pro and Enterprise Pro users to simultaneously search across web content and internal documents. Users can upload and search through Excel, Word, PDF, and other common file formats. Enterprise Pro users have a limit of 500 files for upload and indexing.[22]
In October 2024, Perplexity AI introduced new finance-related features, including looking up stock prices and company earnings data. The tool provides real-time stock quotes and price tracking, industry peer comparisons and basic financial analysis tools. The platform sources its financial data from Financial Modeling Prep (FMP) to ensure accuracy.[23][24]
In January 2025, Perplexity launched the Perplexity Assistant, an AI-powered tool designed to enhance the functionality of its search engine. Since April of 2025, the assistant is available on Android and iOS devices, and is integrated into the Perplexity app. It can perform tasks across multiple apps, such as hailing a ride or searching for a song, and is capable of maintaining context across actions, allowing for more seamless task management.[3]
The Perplexity Assistant is powered by the company's search engine, granting it access to the web. This enables event reminders, including finding the right date and time and creating corresponding calendar entries. The assistant is also multi-modal, meaning it can use a phone's camera to provide answers about the user's surroundings or on-screen content.[3]
Initially, the Perplexity Assistant is free in 15 languages, including English, Spanish, French, German, Japanese, Polish, Korean, and Hindi. Perplexity has acknowledged that the assistant is still in development and may not always function as expected. For instance, certain features, such as summarizing unread emails or upcoming calendar events, require users to enable a workaround based on notifications.[3]
Comet is an agentic web browser now available in beta for select Apple Silicon Mac users, with early access granted to those who signed up for the beta program. Comet aims to transform the web browsing experience by incorporating context-aware intelligence. It personalizes responses based on the user’s browsing history and open tabs. One of the browser’s standout features is the integration of Perplexity’s core search capabilities into a side panel that is accessible across all websites. This allows users to query, summarize, or explore content without having to switch between tabs, enhancing convenience and efficiency. When launching the browser, users will notice that it starts with the ability to block advertisements and trackers on the web. Comet can take commands from the user through its ‘Comet Assistant’ and close/open, group tabs, close duplicate tabs, check the shopping cart, help find unanswered emails, and more. These functions are intended to help users save significant time every week by automating routine tasks. [25]
In June 2024, Forbes publicly criticized Perplexity for using their content. According to Forbes, Perplexity published a story largely copied from a proprietary Forbes article without mentioning or prominently citing Forbes. In response, Srinivas said that the feature had some "rough edges" and accepted feedback but maintained that Perplexity only "aggregates" rather than plagiarizes information.[26][27] In October 2024, The New York Times sent a cease-and-desist notice to Perplexity to stop accessing and using NYT content, claiming that Perplexity is violating its copyright by scraping data from its website.[28] In June 2024, Dow Jones and New York Post filed a lawsuit against Perplexity, alleging copyright infringement. The lawsuit also alleges that Perplexity attributed quotes to an article on F-16 jets for Ukraine that never appeared in the original article.[29] Perplexity released a blog post to address the lawsuits on October 24, 2024. It stated that the complaints are misleading and reiterated that it was open to revenue-sharing programs.[30] On January 31, 2025, Perplexity was sued for alleged trademark infringement by Perplexity Solved Solutions (PSS), a software firm founded in 2017.[31] The lawsuit, filed in the United States, claims that Perplexity AI's use of the name "Perplexity" violates PSS's federally registered trademark, potentially leading to consumer confusion. PSS had previously declined an offer from Perplexity AI to purchase the trademark in 2023. The legal action seeks to prevent Perplexity AI from using the name in its branding and marketing.[32]
In June 2024, separate investigations by the magazine Wired and web developer Robb Knight found that Perplexity does not respect the robots.txt standard, which may include requests for web crawlers to not scrape sections of the site's content, despite Perplexity claiming the opposite. Perplexity also lists the IP address ranges and user agent strings of their web crawlers publicly, but according to Wired and Robb Knight, they use undisclosed IP addresses and spoofed user agent strings when ignoring robots.txt.[33][34] In response, Srinivas stated that Perplexity is not ignoring Robot Exclusion Protocol.[35] When asked whether Perplexity would cease scraping Wired content using third parties, Srinivas responded that "it's complicated."[35]
In June 2025, BBC also threatened legal action against Perplexity AI over content scraping.[36]