Be careful what you do because anything you search for online will be accessible to Gemini.
In the artificial intelligence space, Google is unable to compete with Gemini against industry titans like OpenAI's ChatGPT and upstart DeepSeek. The organization wants its AI responses to be more precise than before, but doing so might jeopardize thousands of users' security.
With its new Gemini 2.0 Pro model, which is accessible to Gemini Advanced subscribers, Google has made an effort to mimic ChatGPT. In return for access to users' device search history, including information from YouTube and other apps, the chatbot will give more precise responses.
Many people are still not convinced by Google's sophisticated feature, despite the Mountain View-based company's claims that it can generate responses based on users' search histories.
Thousands of users' browsing history will be made public by this new Gemini feature, but Google promises to protect their privacy. The chatbot will not train its AI model using the historical data it has gathered.
According to the tech giant, all traces will be automatically erased after 60 days and device history data will not be kept. The duration for which Gemini may gather user browsing data is not currently configurable.
Although Google has only recently introduced this new feature, users are already complaining about it because they are beginning to worry about their privacy.