What does Oasis Browser actually do?
Oasis Browser makes the most sense if you already feel that ordinary browsing has become messy work. The product page keeps returning to the same picture: too many tabs, too much searching for something you already saw, too much time spent pushing browser UI around by hand. Oasis answers that by putting an assistant inside the browser that can search history semantically, summarize the current page, open or close tabs, build groups, and work from the same context you are already looking at. That is a more specific promise than a browser that merely says it has AI.
The privacy story is also more concrete than most launch-day browser pages. Kahana does not stop at calling the product privacy first. It publishes a documentation page that shows the request shape, explains when email and account identifiers stay out of the payload, and spells out that opt-in personalization changes what the company receives. For a product that wants you to let AI touch your browsing context, that level of disclosure matters. It does not remove every trust question, but it is stronger than asking users to accept a vague promise.