Google wants Gemini to get to know you better

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In the AI chatbot wars, Google thinks the key to retaining users is serving up content they can’t get elsewhere, like answers shaped by their internet habits.
On Thursday, the company announced Gemini with personalization, a new “experimental capability” for its Gemini chatbot apps that lets Gemini draw on other Google apps and services to deliver customized responses. Gemini with personalization can tap a user’s activities and preferences across Google’s product ecosystem to deliver tailored answers to queries, according to Gemini product director Dave Citron.
Gemini with personalization, which will integrate with Google Search before expanding to additional Google services like Google Photos and YouTube in the months to come, arrives as chatbot makers including OpenAI attempt to differentiate their virtual assistants with unique and compelling functionality. OpenAI recently rolled out the ability for ChatGPT on macOS to directly edit code in supported apps, while Amazon is preparing to launch an “agentic” reimagining of Alexa.
Citron said Gemini with personalization is powered by Google’s experimental Gemini 2.0 Flash Thinking Experimental AI model, a so-called “reasoning” model that can determine whether personal data from a Google service, like a user’s Search history, is likely to “enhance” an answer. Narrow questions informed by likes and dislikes, like “Where should I go on vacation this summer?” and “What would you suggest I learn as a new hobby?,” will benefit the most, Citron continued.
“For example, you can ask Gemini for restaurant recommendations and it will reference your recent food-related searches,” he said, “or ask for travel advice and Gemini will respond based on destinations you’ve previously searched.”
If this all sounds like a privacy nightmare, well, it could be. It’s not tough to imagine a scenario in which Gemini inadvertently airs someone’s sensitive info.
That’s probably why Google is making Gemini with personalization opt-in — and excluding users under the age of 18. Gemini will ask for permission before connecting to Google Search history and other apps, Citron said, and show which data sources were used to customize the bot’s responses.
“When you’re using the personalization experiment, Gemini displays a clear banner with a link to easily disconnect your Search history,” Citron said. “Gemini will only access your Search history when you’ve selected Gemini with personalization, when you’ve given Gemini permission to connect to your Search history, and when you have Web & App Activity on.”
Gemini with personalization will roll out to Gemini users on the web (except for Google Workspace and Google for Education customers) starting Thursday in the app’s model drop-down menu and “gradually” come to mobile after that. It’ll be available in over 40 languages in “the majority” of countries, Citron said, excluding the European Economic Area, Switzerland, and the U.K.
Citron indicated that the feature may not be free forever.
“Future usage limits may apply,” he wrote in the blog post. “We’ll continue to gather user feedback on the most useful applications of this capability.”
As added incentives to stick with Gemini, Google announced updated models, research capabilities, and app connectors for the platform.
Subscribers to Gemini Advanced, Google’s $20-per-month premium subscription, can now use a standalone version of 2.0 Flash Thinking Experimental that supports file attachments; integrations with apps like Google Calendar, Notes, and Tasks; and a 1-million-token context window. “Context window” refers to text that the model can consider at any given time — 1 million tokens is equivalent to around 750,000 words.
Google said that this latest version of 2.0 Flash Thinking Experimental is faster and more efficient than the model it is replacing, and can better handle prompts that involve multiple apps, like “Look up an easy cookie recipe on YouTube, add the ingredients to my shopping list, and find me grocery stores that are still open nearby.”
Perhaps in response to pressure from OpenAI and its newly launched tools for in-depth research, Google is also enhancing Deep Research, its Gemini feature that searches across the web to compile reports on a subject. Deep Research now exposes its “thinking” steps and uses 2.0 Flash Thinking Experimental as the default model, which should result in “higher-quality” reports that are more “detailed” and “insightful,” Google said.
Deep Research is now free to try for all Gemini users, and Google has increased usage limits for Gemini Advanced customers.
Free Gemini users are also getting Gems, Google’s topic-focused customizable chatbots within Gemini, which previously required a Gemini Advanced subscription. And in the coming weeks, all Gemini users will be able to interact with Google Photos to, for example, look up photos from a recent trip, Google said.
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