
Gemini privacy maze reveals the cost of Google's AI defaults
Ars Technica reports that Google's Gemini AI, embedded in Gmail and Drive, processes data for isolated tasks and may feed outputs into AI training, though Google says private content isn't used to train foundational models. Opting out of training is hard and buried in Gemini's Activity controls; disabling it often sacrifices useful features, a setup critics call dark patterns that undermine user autonomy. The article argues defaults push data collection and AI integration, raising ongoing privacy concerns amid antitrust scrutiny.











