39 Sources
39 Sources
[1]
Google announces massive expansion of AI features in Chrome
Now that it's looking like Chrome will remain in the Google fold, the browser is undergoing a Gemini-infused rebirth. Google claims the browser will see its most significant upgrade ever in the next few weeks as AI permeates every part of the experience. For people who use AI tools, some of these additions might actually be helpful, and for everyone else, well, Firefox still exists. The most prominent change, and one that AI subscribers may have already seen, is the addition of a Gemini button on the desktop browser. This button opens a popup where you can ask questions about -- and get summaries of -- content in your open tabs. Android phones already have Gemini operating at the system level to accomplish similar tasks, but Google says the iOS Gemini app will soon be built into Chrome for Apple devices. Gemini isn't limited to your current tab. Google aims to make it possible to interact with other apps and tabs without leaving the current screen. When you invoke Gemini in Chrome, it can work with the content in all your open tabs, and it has connections to Google products like Calendar and YouTube. It can also find links in your history based on a vague remembrance. AI mode is also moving closer to becoming Google's default way to search the web. The updated Chrome now lets you begin AI Mode searches from the omnibar. There's a button to press if you want AI Mode, but it would be quite easy to swap in AI Mode for traditional searches in the browser. The omnibox will also gain "ask about this page" functionality. Chrome can suggest these questions (in English only for now) and show the answer in a side panel. The answer will, naturally, lead off with an AI Overview, and you can ask follow-up questions in AI Mode. Google says it's also using AI to shore up Chrome's security. Gemini tools can already identify common tech support scams. An updated Gemini Nano model will be deployed that expands those detection features to spot fake virus alerts and phony giveaways. Chrome's password manager already tells you about compromised passwords, but with its AI overhaul, it can also automatically change them for you with one click. Although, it seems like that could easily go wrong.
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Google brings Gemini in Chrome to US users, unveils agentic browsing capabilities, and more | TechCrunch
Google announced Thursday that it's rolling out Gemini in Chrome to all Mac and Windows desktop users in the U.S. after previously limiting the capability to Google AI Pro and Google AI Ultra subscribers. The tech giant also announced that it's bringing agentic capabilities to Chrome in the future, adding its AI Mode search feature to the address bar, launching new Gemini features, using AI to combat AI-generated scams, rolling out automatic password resets, and more. U.S. users who have their language set to English can now ask Gemini to clarify complex information on any webpage they're reading using the Gemini icon in the top-right corner of their Chrome window. For example, you could open up a page that features a banana bread recipe and ask Gemini to make the recipe gluten free. Gemini can now work across multiple tabs, allowing users to quickly compare and summarize information across multiple websites. For example, you could be planning your flight, hotel, and vacation in multiple tabs and work with Gemini to organize your trip. Or, you might be shopping for a new mattress and want to compare all of the different models you're looking at in multiple tabs. Gemini will soon be able to retrieve web pages you've previously visited, making it easier to return to past browsing sessions without sifting through your browser history. That means you will be able to ask something like "On which site did I see the walnut desk last week?" or "What was that blog I read on back to school shopping?" Additionally, Google is launching a deeper integration between Gemini in Chrome and other Google apps, like Calendar, YouTube, and Maps. Google says this will allow users to do things like schedule meetings, see location details, and more more without having to leave the page they're on. For example, if you're trying to find a a specific spot in a YouTube video, you can ask Gemini to take you there. Google notes that the AI assistant will be able to complete tedious tasks, like booking a haircut or ordering weekly groceries. Gemini will navigate to the site, add things to your cart, and let you take the final action by checking out with your payment option. Google says the new agentic capabilities will be coming to Chrome in the coming months. It's worth noting that OpenAI launched Operator, an AI agent that performs tasks autonomously, earlier this year. Google is also bringing AI Mode, its advanced search feature, directly into the Chrome address bar. With AI Mode, users can ask complex questions with follow-ups to dig deeper into topics. For example, instead of searching for "best mattress," you could type out "I'm a side sleeper with occasional lower back pain, make me a table comparing the different mattress types" directly in the address bar. From there, you could ask follow-up questions and keep your search going with queries like, "How long do memory foam mattresses typically last?" This update will be rolling out later this month in English in the U.S. and expanding to more countries and languages in the future. Also coming to the address bar is the ability to ask questions about the page you're on. Chrome can now suggest relevant questions based on the context of the page to kickstart your search in the address bar. Google says users will get a helpful AI Overview and the option to ask follow-up questions with AI Mode. Google says Chrome will also soon be able to use its Gemini Nano model to detect and protect against scams, such as fake virus alerts and fraudulent giveaways. These scams often impersonate trusted brands and use generative AI to create convincing phishing attempts, Google notes. Google also announced that it's using AI to help users fix compromised passwords with a single click on supported sites, like Coursera, Spotify, Duolingo, H&M, and more. If Chrome warns you that you password was exposed in a data breach, you can allow it to create and save a new one for you.
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Google Injects Gemini Into Chrome as AI Browsers Go Mainstream
Google is adding multiple new AI features to Chrome, the most popular browser in the world. The most visible change is a new button in Chrome that launches the Gemini chatbot, but there are also new tools for searching, researching, and answering questions with AI. Google has additional cursor-controlling "agentic" tools in the pipeline for Chrome as well. The Gemini in Chrome mode for the web browser uses generative AI to answer questions about content on a page and synthesize information across multiple open tabs. Gemini in Chrome first rolled out to Google's paying subscribers in May. The AI-focused features are now available to all desktop users in the US browsing in English; they'll show up in a browser update. On mobile devices, Android users can already use aspects of Gemini within the Chrome app, and Google is expected to launch an update for iOS users of Chrome in the near future. When I wrote about web browsers starting to add more generative AI tools back in 2023, it was primarily something that served as an alternative to the norm. The software was built by misfits and change-makers who were experimenting with new tools, or hunting for a break-out feature to grow their small user bases. All of this activity was dwarfed by the commanding number of users who preferred Chrome. Two years later, while Google's browser remains the market leader, the internet overall is completely seeped in AI tools, many of them also made by Google. Still, today marks the moment when the concept of an "AI browser" truly went mainstream with the weaving of Gemini so closely into the Chrome browser. The Gemini strategy at Google has already been to leverage as many of its in-house integrations as possible, from Gmail to Google Docs. So, the decision to AI-ify the Chrome browser for a wider set of users does not come as a shock. Even so, the larger roll out will likely be met with ire by some users who are either exhausted by the onslaught of AI-focused features in 2025 or want to abstain from using generative AI, whether for environmental reasons or because they don't want their activity to be used to train an algorithm. Users who don't want to see the Gemini option will be able to click on the Gemini sparkle icon and unpin it from the top right corner of the Chrome browser.
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Google's Gemini AI Is Coming for Every Chrome Desktop User
Gemini in Chrome, a melding of Google's AI assistant and its popular web browser, is rolling out to Windows and Mac desktop users in the US starting today, the company said in a blog post Thursday. Businesses will gain access via Google Workspace in the coming weeks. The rollout will only work if you have Chrome set to English. Adding Gemini in Chrome allows you to have an AI assistant at your side during all online interactions. You can access Gemini via a new icon in the top-right corner of the browser. Gemini in Chrome is intended to streamline the online browsing experience: You can ask Gemini to summarize a YouTube video or have it compare prices between multiple shopping tabs. "We are evolving the browser to help you get the most from the web -- in ways we didn't think possible even a few years ago," Rick Osterloh, senior vice president of platforms and devices at Google, said in a press release sent by email. "And we are doing it while keeping the speed, simplicity and safety of Chrome that so many people love." Don't miss any of our unbiased tech content and lab-based reviews. Add CNET as a preferred Google source. Having Gemini summarize web pages is handy, but the AI assistant will eventually do a lot more. In the coming weeks, Google's rolling out agentic capabilities, empowering Gemini to do tasks on your behalf. For example, if you want to order a pizza, the AI assistant can browse a food delivery website, add the desired pie to your cart and wait for you to give final checkout approval. Another powerful feature is its ability to make sense of multiple open tabs in Chrome. For example, if you're hotel shopping and want to compare prices, Gemini in Chrome can analyze all the various hotel website tabs you have open and help you find the one that meets your needs. Gemini will be built into the iPhone Chrome app. However, Android users will have a different experience. There won't be a separate Gemini icon in your Chrome browser on mobile. Instead, Android users can hold the power button down to activate Gemini. Looking back at your browsing history should also get easier with Gemini. Instead of perusing a long list of websites, you can simply ask Gemini to pull up the website from last week that had the walnut desk you were looking for. Gemini in Chrome works with other Google apps, like Calendar, YouTube and Maps. So, if you're watching a restaurant review on YouTube, you can ask Gemini to give you directions to that restaurant, and it'll do so via Google Maps. Google AI Mode, which is essentially an AI chatbot built into Google Search, will also be in Chrome. That's where you can ask longer and more complex questions for deeper research. Gemini in Chrome isn't the first browser to integrate AI. Microsoft was an early player, bringing Copilot to Edge back in 2023. Perplexity launched Comet earlier this year, its own AI-powered Chromium-based browser. Reports from earlier this year also suggest ChatGPT creator OpenAI is working on an AI web browser. Gemini in Chrome will bring AI-powered security, as well. Using Gemini Nano, a lightweight model, Google says it'll expand protections to spot viruses or fake giveaways that trick users. Google said site notifications are becoming an annoyance, and Chrome will now be able to detect spammy or scammy ones. Google's AI models will essentially learn your preferences and automatically start blocking certain permissions. Whenever your password does become compromised, Gemini in Chrome will let you change it with a single click on supported sites, like Coursera, Spotify, Duolingo and more.
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Google is expanding Gemini in Chrome and letting it do stuff for you
Google is stepping things up in the AI agent browser wars. The company is launching a suite of new features deeply embedding Gemini into Chrome. That starts with the announcement that Gemini in Chrome will no longer require a membership fee and will begin rolling out to both Mac and Windows users in the US starting today. It's all part of the battle for consumer use of AI-fueled browsers, which OpenAI, Anthropic, Google, Perplexity, and other companies are all fighting to win. Like OpenAI's ChatGPT Agent, Google is also planning to introduce an ability for Gemini in Chrome to be able to do "tedious tasks" on your behalf in the coming months, Charmaine D'Silva, Chrome's director of product management, said in a briefing with reporters on Wednesday. It's designed to grocery shop for you from a grocery list in your email, reschedule deliveries, set up hair appointments, book restaurant reservations, and more, and it will have checkpoints in place for anything that's considered "high-risk" or "irreversible," she said. Google did not provide a specific launch date when asked by The Verge. Other Gemini features are shipping sooner. The new features Google announced Thursday also include giving Gemini in Chrome access to Google Workspace for both regular and Enterprise users, with the rollout starting today, as well as enabling integrations with other Google products, like Calendar, YouTube, Maps, and more. The changes allow Gemini in Chrome to "find relevant information on your screen and also take action on your screen" with those tools, D'Silva said. "Enterprises are a pretty important focus for Chrome generally," D'Silva said. On desktop Chrome, users will now be able to use the Gemini AI agent across multiple different tabs to compare products, summarize information from multiple sources, and recall previous pages from a user's browser history. That means that starting today, users will be able to can close their myriad tabs and then have the AI agent recall them. "Say you were looking at team-building activities and it's the end of your day -- if you wanted to pick it back [up] the next day, typically what people would do was leave those tabs open," D'Silva said. "But now you can close those tabs, and the next morning you can go and say,' Hey, can you show me those team-building activities that I was looking at yesterday? And we automatically show you." On mobile, Gemini was already integrated into Android, but users will now be able to share the entire context of a page, not just what's currently on their screen, so they can ask "deeper questions," D'Silva said. iPhone users will be able to access Gemini via the Chrome app soon. Improvements to how AI agents work in users' browsers have been coming for a while. Last year, Anthropic introduced Computer Use, allowing Claude as an AI agent to use your browser and complete tasks on your behalf, and months later, OpenAI announced Operator, which was designed to do the same. This past July, OpenAI combined its Deep research and Operator features into one agentic tool, ChatGPT Agent. That same month, Perplexity launched Comet, its own AI-powered web browser. Atlassian just spent $610 million to buy The Browser Company, makers of the AI-infused browser Dia.
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Gemini arrives in Chrome - here's everything it can do now
It's slated to receive more agentic abilities in the coming months. Google is rolling out some major AI-powered upgrades to Chrome, as the technology continues to power a transformation throughout the broader online search industry. Also: Zoning out in meetings? Google Meet's new feature can catch you up in real time The tech giant announced Thursday it was weaving Gemini -- its flagship generative AI chatbot -- into Chrome in an effort to deliver a user experience that feels like an active collaboration with AI, one that can save users time and reduce hassle. "This isn't just about adding new features; it's about fundamentally changing the nature of browsing, and moving from a passive experience to a more proactive and intelligent one," Parisa Tabriz, Vice President of Chrome, wrote in a company blog post Thursday. "It's about creating a browser that goes beyond rendering the web, to one that understands it, helps you be more productive, and keeps you safer online." The biggest new feature Google announced Thursday is Gemini in Chrome, which the company is positioning as an AI assistant that can track and understand the context of your web search, and from there provide assistance across several key tasks. Also: Gemini just aced the world's most elite coding competition - what it means for AGI Through a new chatbot interface built directly into Chrome (accessible via an icon at the top-right corner of the browser), you can ask Gemini to summarize the content found on a particular web page, just as you would if you were to drop a link into ChatGPT and ask for an explanation of key points. The system can work across multiple tabs. So if you're planning a vacation and have several different tabs open to research flights, hotels, restaurants, and so on, you can ask the assistant to consolidate all of that disparate information into a single itinerary. (Google also debuted an AI-powered upgrade to its Flights platform, which offers similar travel-planning capabilities.) It can also integrate directly with other Google apps, so that you'll be able, for example, to quickly find a specific moment from a YouTube video. In the coming months, Gemini in Chrome will receive an agentic upgrade enabling it to take action directly on your behalf -- by, say, booking a haircut appointment that fits with your calendar. Also: Google's new study tool personalizes your learning material - here's how Gemini in Chrome is starting to roll out today for Mac and Windows desktop users in the US. Google said it will launch across iOS and Android soon, and will be made available to enterprise clients via Google Workspace in the coming weeks. Google also announced that it's integrating AI Mode directly into the omnibox, or the address search bar found at the top of a Chrome web page (just below the tabs, where you'd normally enter a URL). This will allow users to ask complex questions directly inside a web page. AI Mode can then suggest potentially helpful follow-up questions and provide relevant web links; it's basically taking Google's search engine, sprinkling in some enhanced AI capabilities, and making all of that directly accessible from the omnibox. Also: ChatGPT just got a new personalization hub. Not everyone is happy about it AI Mode in the omnibox will start rolling out for US users later this month, according to Google. Google's new AI-enhanced Chrome will face growing competition as tech companies race to build the next generation of web browsers. Also: Students are using AI tools instead of building foundational skills - but resistance is growing Earlier this month, Atlassian announced it had acquired The Browser Company for a reported amount of $610 million and would soon launch an AI-centered version of the Dia web browser. Perplexity also launched Comet, its own AI-powered web browser, earlier this summer.
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Google Tips Deeper AI Mode, Gemini Integration in Chrome. What to Expect
Our team tests, rates, and reviews more than 1,500 products each year to help you make better buying decisions and get more from technology. Like it or not, more AI is coming to Google's Chrome browser, including some "agentic" assistant capabilities designed to complete repetitive tasks. First, Google's Gemini chatbot will be available on Chrome for free. The company debuted the Gemini integration at Google I/O in May, but it initially required a paid Google AI plan. Starting today, Gemini in Chrome is rolling out for free to Mac and Windows desktop users in the US with English set as their language. Access it by clicking the star icon in the top right-hand corner, which will open a small window, letting you type directly to Gemini. Gemini is also coming to Chrome on mobile in the US, "ensuring you'll always have access to our AI features, whether you're at home or on the go," says Google VP of Product Mike Torres. It's rolling out first on Android, where you can also activate Gemini via the power button, and coming "soon" to iOS, Torres says. The change might expose more users to Gemini, a rival to OpenAI's ChatGPT. Google is also promising that Gemini can do more than simply answer your questions, but perform various tasks on your Chrome session. "In the coming months, we'll be introducing agentic capabilities to Gemini in Chrome. These will let Gemini in Chrome handle those tedious tasks that take up so much of your time, like booking a haircut or ordering your weekly groceries," Torres says. The company showed a demo to journalists, involving a user asking Gemini to buy a list of ingredients displayed in an email from their Gmail account. In response, the Gemini integration reads the email, opens a new browser tab in Chrome to load up Instacart.com, and proceeds to add the various items to the cart before the user can review and finalize the purchase. "It can be stopped at any time, so you're in control," Torres says. In addition, Gemini can navigate through various browser tabs to compare and summarize information across them. This could be helpful if you're planning a trip and have various tabs open concerning hotels, flights, and vacation information. Google also views Gemini as a new way to access and conveniently search through your browser history for a site you'd like to re-access. Prompts like "what was the website that I saw the walnut desk on last week?" or "what was that blog I read on back-to-school shopping?" should cause Gemini to return the accurate result from your browser history, Torres says. The same can apply to Google's YouTube. In another demo, the company showed a user asking Gemini for a summary of a YouTube clip. In return, the chatbot analyzed the video and wrote several brief takeaways, along with links to the specific sections in the clip. For now, Google merely demoed the agentic features in the clips shown above, rather than offering a hands on. We're curious how they perform and whether the AI integration is susceptible to error since Gemini and other chatbots are prone to hallucinations. AI Mode in Chrome's Search Bar Outside of Gemini, the other major change coming to Chrome is Google integrating its AI Mode directly into the browser's search/address bar. That's a major shake-up since the bar usually takes your query and runs it through the traditional Google search engine. In contrast, Google's AI Mode dumps the traditional search results page filled with links for a ChatGPT-like interface that researches your question and generates the answer for you -- with the links to the third-party sources shoved off to the side. Chrome's upcoming AI Mode will appear in the search bar by default -- but using it isn't automatic. Based on a demo, it looks like you'll need to type your request into the search bar and then click a button to run it through the AI Mode. Otherwise, your query will simply go through the normal Google search engine. "AI Mode is completely optional," Google says. Expect it to roll out later this month in English for US users, with more markets and languages added in the weeks ahead. (If you don't like the AI Mode button, Google is indicating that only Chrome Enterprise users can completely disable it.) In another tweak, Google says accessing Chrome's search bar will trigger the browser to offer AI-powered "contextual suggestions" based on the web page being viewed. This could include summarizing the customer views on a product page or finding out more about the warranty policy. On the security side, Google has released more details about how it's going to use AI to automatically replace your exposed passwords through Chrome. The company first introduced the feature in May; it builds on Google's Password Manager and is accessible on the browser. Although Chrome's password manager already alerts you if a saved password appears in a data breach, changing it has traditionally required visiting the site and completing extra steps. The good news: Google wants Chrome to handle the entire process with a single click, automatically replacing compromised passwords with stronger ones and saving them in Password Manager. The only challenge is that the feature requires third-party websites to add some computer code to enable the password replacement. After teasing the feature in May, Google now says it will launch "very soon," with support for about 250 sites, including Coursera, Spotify, Duolingo, and H&M. Expect more sites to be added over time. We suspect Google announced the features to try and outdo OpenAI, which is preparing its own AI-powered browser to take on Chrome. It's no secret that ChatGPT poses a competitive threat to traditional search engines, although Google still dominates in traffic.
[8]
Google Adds Gemini to Chrome After Dodging Forced Sale
Google is incorporating its Gemini artificial intelligence model throughout the Chrome browser, just two weeks after dodging an antitrust case that could have broken up the company. Gemini, which Alphabet Inc.'s Google has been implementing across its products, will be added Thursday for Chrome users in the US. Among its tasks, the AI will respond to requests to provide explanations of the web pages visited, condense information across multiple tabs and even bring back some of the websites previously closed, the company said in a blog post. The tech giant is also integrating Gemini in Chrome with other Google apps, such as Calendar, YouTube and Maps, according to the blog post.
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Google reveals plan to go full AI browser with Chrome
Why browse the web yourself when an AI sidekick can spoon-feed it to you? Now that it knows it won't be forced to sell its browser, Google is cramming AI into every vacant corner of Chrome it can find, whether you like it or not. According to Google's VP of product for Chrome Mike Torres, this is the "biggest upgrade to Chrome in its history," provided you consider transforming Chrome into yet another AI browser by adding a Gemini button to it to be an upgrade. The Gemini-ification of Chrome, which is rolling out beginning today (only for macOS and Windows users in the US with their Chrome language set to English), will allow users to do things like get an AI-simplified interpretation of any webpage they're on, summarize info from multiple tabs in one response, comb through one's web history or content from Google apps, and pull the usual tricks AI browsers already offer. Those aren't the only ways Google intends to inject AI into Chrome in the coming months, though. Where once the Chrome address bar, known in Google parlance as the "omnibox," would return search results peppered with an ever-increasing number of AI overviews, it seems like it will now shunt users into AI Mode, where one's entire result page is filtered through not only Google's algorithm but also Gemini's determination of what's most important. In an embedded video on Google's announcement page, a user is shown entering a query and clicking an AI mode button at the right side of the Omnibox to go straight into AI mode, bypassing search. It's unclear what will happen if you just hit the enter key instead of clicking this button. However, this could have a huge negative impact on publishers who have already lost a huge chunk of the traffic Google was sending them. How many users do all or most of their searches directly from the Omnibox? Expect that to show up later this month, per Google's Chrome VP Parisa Tabriz. For those who think booking an appointment online or ordering groceries for delivery from the comfort of their own home meets the definition of a "tedious task," Google is also planning to add agentic capabilities to Chrome in the coming months. "You tell Gemini in Chrome what you want to get done, and it acts on web pages on your behalf, while you focus on other things," Torres wrote. "It can be stopped at any time so you're in control." The Chocolate Factory is also planning to improve its ability to block online scams with Gemini by giving it the ability to "stop sites that use fake viruses or fake giveaways to trick you," and will begin using AI to learn a user's web preferences to help it determine if a website that wants users to allow it to send notifications should be considered spam. Here's a hint: If a website wants to send notifications, it's probably spam regardless of what Gemini thinks. Chrome will also start using AI agents to automate password changes "with a single click," but only on supported websites, which it lists as including "Coursera, Spotify, Duolingo, H&M and more." Given the way AI has been force-fed to users by big tech in the past, the first question to come to mind is whether these features will be opt-in or opt-out. We're guessing it'll likely be the latter. We're also curious whether there will be any good way to turn these features off and whether Google intends to use information gleaned through these features to train its AIs, but we didn't hear back from the company when we asked those questions. On an unrelated note, anyone got a good browser to recommend? ®
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Google adds Gemini to Chrome browser after avoiding antitrust breakup
Sept 18 (Reuters) - Google will integrate Gemini into its Chrome browser for users in the U.S. starting Thursday, just weeks after a federal judge spared the company from a forced breakup in an antitrust case. Alphabet-owned (GOOGL.O), opens new tab Google won't have to sell the browser, a judge in Washington said earlier this month, handing a rare win to Big Tech in its battle with U.S. antitrust enforcers, but ordered it to share data with rivals to open up competition in online search. The Gemini AI models add-on to Chrome will be available to Mac and Windows desktop users in the U.S. with their language set to English, Google said in a blog post on Thursday. Starting soon, Apple's (AAPL.O), opens new tab iOS Chrome app will also have Gemini built into it. Gemini in Chrome will roll out to businesses in the coming weeks via Google Workspace and also on mobile phones in the U.S. The tech giant also built a deeper integration between Gemini in Chrome and other Google apps, such as Calendar, YouTube and Maps. Google will add agentic capabilities that can perform multi-step tasks to Gemini in Chrome in the coming months. It will also find previously visited webpages and enable summarization of content from multiple websites, among other upgrades. The integration is also a push to compete against other companies providing agentic browsers, like Perplexity, which in August made a $34.5 billion unsolicited all-cash offer for Chrome. Its AI-powered browser, Comet, can perform certain tasks on a user's behalf. The ruling by Judge Amit Mehta earlier in September allows Google to retain control of Chrome and Android mobile operating system, while barring certain exclusive contracts with device makers and browser developers. Google can continue making payments to partners such as Apple to feature its search engine, a practice central to its dominance in online search. Apple has approached Google to use Gemini AI to revamp the Siri voice assistant, Bloomberg News had reported in August. Reporting by Juby Babu in Mexico City; Editing by Alan Barona Our Standards: The Thomson Reuters Trust Principles., opens new tab
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Google adds Gemini to Chrome for all users in push to bolster AI search
In a blog post Thursday, Google said it's rolling out Gemini in Chrome to users of Mac and Windows computers in the U.S. as well as to mobile devices. Users will be able to ask Gemini for help understanding the contents of a particular webpage, work across tabs, or do more within a single tab, such as schedule a meeting or search for a YouTube video. "We are evolving the browser to help you get the most from the web - in ways we didn't think possible even a few years ego," said Rick Osterloh, Google's senior vice president in charge of platforms and devices, in a statement. "And we are doing it while keeping the speed, simplicity and safety of Chrome that so many people love." Internet browsers are at the center of the battle for consumer AI supremacy because they serve as a key gateway to accessing information and content online. Google and Apple have for years controlled most of the internet distribution points, which is a big reason the U.S. Department of Justice tried to force Google to divest Chrome as part of its antitrust case. However, the judge in the case recently decided Google could keep Chrome, in large part because generative AI has dramatically changed the competitive landscape.
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Gemini in Chrome no longer requires a subscription
, Google began integrating Gemini into Chrome. At the time, you needed an to access the AI assistant in the browser. That's changing today. Google has begun rolling out the tool to all Chrome desktop users on both Windows and Mac. Provided you have Chrome's language set to English and live in the US, you'll see a new at the top of the interface. Tapping it will allow you to start making requests of Gemini. You can also use the tool on a smartphone. On Android, you can do so by holding your phone's power button. On iOS, meanwhile, Google is working on bringing the assistant to the Chrome app. Since its introduction at I/O, Google has made some enhancements to how Gemini works inside of Chrome. To start, the tool can now work across multiple tabs, allowing it to compare and summarize information from different websites. At the same time, Gemini can access your browsing history thanks to a new recall feature. Google suggests this can be helpful in situations where you can't quite remember where you saw something online. Instead of manually sifting through your browser history, you can write a prompt like "what was that blog I read on back to school shopping?" and Gemini will take care of the rest. The new version of Gemini for Chrome also offers deeper integrations with other Google services, including Calendar, YouTube and Maps. For instance, you can ask the assistant to schedule meetings for you, and if you're working through a long YouTube video, Gemini can generate timestamps you can use to jump around the video. At the start of May, Google to upgrade Chrome's Enhanced Protection suite. On Thursday, the company said Gemini Nano would also soon work to protect users against websites that use fake viruses or giveaways to trick them. Google has also added an algorithm that will learn your preferences for granting permissions. When it determines you're unlikely to grant a website permission to access your computer's camera or location, it will present those requests in a less intrusive way. Similarly, Google will add an AI designed to make it easier to update compromised credentials through Chrome's built-in password manager. Starting with a handful of supported websites -- including Coursera, Duolingo and Spotify -- you'll be able to change your passwords with a single click. In the coming months, Google plans to bring agentic capabilities to Chrome, meaning Gemini will be able to complete tasks for you. For example, the company envisions people using this feature to do their weekly grocery shopping through Instacart. The company first previewed this capability with at the end of 2024. Over the last year, a few different companies have released their own takes on web-surfing agents with mixed results. For example, people have complained of failing to complete some tasks. "Our hope is that by the time this gets to users, we've done away with many of the potential snafus," said Mike Torres, vice president of product for Chrome, during a media briefing Google held ahead of today's announcement. "This is an experimental experience we're continuing to improve. We're not going to do something that comprises the user experience." Last but not least, Google is adding an AI Mode mode shortcut directly to Chrome's address bar. If you need a refresher, AI Mode is Google's . At I/O 2025, the company made it available to every . Now you can access it without navigating to Google first. When I asked Torres about the button, he was quick to note users don't have to use the shortcut. "What we're trying to do is maintain users' existing behavior," he added. As with any major update from Google, it may take a few days for the new features to roll out to your installation of Chrome.
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Google turns Chrome into an AI browser with Gemini integration
Serving tech enthusiasts for over 25 years. TechSpot means tech analysis and advice you can trust. What just happened? In its race against ChatGPT's popularity and Microsoft's Copilot, Google is working to get Gemini in front of as many users as quickly as possible. This week, the company took a decisive step by turning Chrome, the world's most popular web browser, into an AI-powered browser. Google has started rolling out agentic AI features in Chrome for macOS and Windows users in the US. The new generative AI tool can analyze web pages, interact with Google apps, and perform tasks autonomously. Chrome will soon display the Gemini diamond logo in the top-right corner. Clicking it opens a chatbot window for questions and natural language commands, and Google has also integrated AI functionality directly into the address bar. The assistant can consolidate and explain information from all open tabs, eliminating the need to switch back and forth. It can also recall previously visited pages from a description, provided Gemini is allowed to access Chrome's browsing history. To demonstrate Gemini's capabilities, Google showed it summarizing a YouTube video into bullet points with timestamp links. It then used the summary to create recurring events in Google Calendar. Gemini can also navigate e-commerce sites to add shopping-list items to a cart, but it always asks for approval before completing a purchase. The update is likely Google's attempt to boost Gemini adoption and position Chrome as the leading AI-powered browser before competitors like Microsoft and OpenAI gain ground. Microsoft has been integrating its Copilot assistant into Edge for some time, but Chrome's user base still dwarfs Edge and every other desktop rival. Meanwhile, OpenAI's ChatGPT remains the most popular generative AI assistant, and the company recently introduced Operator, a web-browsing agent for paying subscribers. In response, Google is racing to launch the first widely available free agentic browser. By contrast, Vivaldi is resisting AI integration, citing reports that AI-generated summaries reduce users' likelihood of clicking through to sources, thereby lowering traffic. Concerns about accuracy also persist, as the hallucination problem remains unresolved. Gemini integration in Chrome is also coming soon to businesses via Google Workspace, as well as to the Android and iOS versions of the browser.
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Google Launches Agentic AI to Browse Chrome for You
Earlier this month, Google avoided having to sell off its Chrome browser as a penalty for operating an illegal monopoly in its search business, and now it's going all in on features that will keep users further ingrained in the Google ecosystem. On Thursday, the company announced a reimagined version of the Chrome browser that will be littered with AI features, including Gemini integration throughout the browser and an agentic AI that can navigate the web and complete tasks on behalf of the user. As of today, Google's Gemini chatbot will be available across Chrome to all users and will no longer require a Google One membership to access, according to the company. Users will have to be logged into a Google account in Chrome to access the features. The chatbot will be available across Mac and Windows desktops for users in the US. It's already available on Android and will be coming "soon" for iOS users, as well. It'll be paired with a suped-up version of the company's AI Mode that will be available throughout the browsing experience to find information and answers. The company is expanding access to its AI Mode, first launched as an option within Search, through which users will be able to get an AI Overview (the same kind that has been spotted offering bad information in search results) of basically any webpage they are visiting. They can also ask context-specific questions about the contents of the page, which can be performed through the Omnibox, where users would otherwise enter a search query or a web address. In a demo, the company showed a user asking AI Mode to grab warranty information while shopping for a mattress. Google says contextual suggestions are available now for users in the US, with AI Mode in the omnibox rolling out in the US later this month. Both features will launch with support for queries in English and will expand to more countries and languages later this year. Per Google, users will also be able to tap Gemini to execute several tasks. The AI assistant, which is activated via the sparkle icon in the top right corner of the browser, will be able to compare information across tabs to help users have all relevant information in the same place, rather than needing to jump across multiple pages. Google points to planning a trip as one task that can be simplified through this feature, pulling together information about flights, hotels, and activities from a plethora of open tabs into one spot. Perhaps the most intriguing feature that Google will be rolling into its AI-ified browser in the coming months is the introduction of agentic browsing. The company says that users will be able to assign Gemini to handle multi-step tasks, and it can navigate the web on the user's behalf to complete the assignment. In a demo, Google showed the Gemini agent getting assigned a list of groceries from an email and adding those items to the user's cart on Instacart. According to the company, the Gemini agent can operate in the background while the user continues to browse the web. It also said that agents will stop before completing any "high-risk" task, like making a purchase or sending an email, so the user can review and make changes before finalizing it. Other companiesâ€"most notably, OpenAIâ€"have also announced agentic browsing, though reviews of the feature have been pretty mixed. OpenAI's ChatGPT Agent is also locked behind a $20 per month paywall. It's too soon to tell if the Gemini Agent will fall under the suite of free features available to all users or will end up being a premium offering that will require a subscription or fee. But Google's Gemini Agent comes with a few advantages that OpenAI doesn't, including being native to the browser it is functioning within Chrome. That nativity can also be seen in some of Chrome's other AI features. The company announced that Gemini will be able to access other Google apps like Calendar (so it can schedule meetings), Maps (so it can look up location details), and YouTube (so it can search and find specific references within videos or generate a summary of what you're watching). It'll also work to recall web pages you've visited in the past. “At Google, our vision for AI is to create technology that’s truly helpful. We’re using the world’s leading models to transform so many of our products, and Chrome is a great place to see our vision come to life for billions of people," Rick Osterloh, Senior Vice President of Platforms and Devices at Google, said in a statement. "We are evolving the browser to help you get the most from the web - in ways we didn’t think possible even a few years ago." Google might avoid the consequences of the monopoly charges, but it certainly seems like it's going to use its market share to get users hooked on the AI tools within its ecosystem.
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Chrome is about to get a Gemini update
Google today announced a further commitment to AI integration in its products with updates to its 17-year-old browser that it said are designed to improve productivity, simplify browsing, and bolster online safety. Gemini in Chrome launches on desktop and mobile The focus is Gemini in Chrome, which acts as an AI assistant: clarifying information, summarizing across tabs, locating references in YouTube videos, and resurfacing closed tabs in the form of a naturally worded request instead of a series of keyboard commands. These features are available today to Mac and Windows desktop users in the US who have their language set to English in Chrome. As for mobile users, those in the US with Android devices can use Gemini in Chrome now, and iOS will get access soon. It will be rolled out to businesses using Google Workspace with enterprise-grade controls in a few weeks. Google said that in the coming months, Gemini in Chrome will gain more advanced agentic capabilities, enabling it to perform multi-step tasks like booking a haircut or ordering groceries. Regarding the latter, Charmaine D'Silva, a director of product management on the Chrome team, said Gemini will stop before the purchase phase for review. AI Mode makes for smarter searching Chrome's search and address bar, is being updated with AI mode, letting users enter more complex queries and receive AI-generated answers alongside suggested follow-up searches. Users can engage it by clicking on an "AI Mode" chip on the right side of the search bar. They'll then get recommendations based on the page they're viewing. Google demonstrated the feature with prompts to compare products and check warranty policies on mattresses in a side panel. US users who have English selected as their language in Chrome have access to the contextual suggestions starting today and will get AI mode in the search box later this month. Google said AI Mode will expand to more countries and other languages in the coming weeks. Gemini Nano will be scanning for threats and taking action Finally, Google said it has expanded the use of Gemini Nano, its lightweight AI model, to help block scams like fake virus alerts or giveaways. When annoying spam notifications pop up, users have the option of seeing them or unsubscribing from them. Google also said Gemini Nano will study user behaviour around requests for things like camera access or location sharing to only allow through permission notifications that a person is unlikely to grant. In the next few weeks, Chrome will implement Gemini Nano to make one-click password changes on compromised accounts. Parisa Tabriz, general manager for Google Chrome, said that despite people being notified when a password is at risk, they often do not take any action to change it. Her team theorized that reducing the complications of changing passwords would lead to more people protecting their data. Google said the feature is coming over the next few weeks, with about 250 sites supported at launch and more to come.
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Google Chrome's Gemini Revamp Has Me Worried
Google Chrome has slowly accumulated more generative AI features over the last two years, and now even more of them are on the way. Google has announced deeper integration with its Gemini AI assistant, including an "agent browsing assistant" that will attempt to automate online tasks. Before getting into the specifics, I'll say that I am deeply concerned about Google shoving more generative AI features into the world's most popular web browser. This is a technology that is not fully accurate, triggers psychological breakdowns in some people, and is built upon massive libraries of stolen work. The introduction of AI responses in Google web searches has already cut into the revenue of creators and publishers making the content that AI requires to function, and these Gemini integrations in Chrome are clearly designed to funnel more people away from traditional web searches. Last year, Google's AI was telling people to eat glue and rocks, and now it's at the core of Chrome. First, the Gemini assistant will be accessible from a new button at the top-right corner of the desktop browser window. From there, you get the standard Gemini chat interface, but with the added option of using your current tabs and browsing history as context. For example, if you have a cooking recipe open, you could click the button and start asking questions like "what stores sell the ingredients for this recipe" without copying and pasting anything from the page. The Gemini assistant will be available inside the iPhone and iPad version of Chrome, too. Google is also "introducing agentic capabilities to Gemini in Chrome," which will allow Gemini to take control of a tab to perform tasks. The company said it will be able to do "those tedious tasks that take up so much of your time, like booking a haircut or ordering your weekly groceries." It remains to be seen how that will perform in real-world tests -- ChatGPT agent made the same promises with similar generative AI technology, but it doesn't work all that well. This feature will start rolling out "in the coming months." Chrome is also getting quick access to Google's AI Mode from the address bar. As you type a search, an 'AI Mode' button will be accessible in the corner of the search bar, and clicking it will open the result in AI Mode instead of a regular web search. You may also see suggestions as you type that start a conversation with Gemini, instead of opening a regular web search. Finally, Google will use Gemini to detect sophisticated scams and notifications, and change your compromised passwords with a single click on supported sites. Many of these changes will sound familiar if you've seen Microsoft Edge's Copilot integrations, or some of the AI-first web browsers that have popped up over the last year, like Perplexity's Comet Browser. This might kill some of the interest in those browsers, except for the people who prefer different AI models. For those of you who don't like generative AI, Chrome is adding a lot more features you'll have to disable. You could certainly make the argument that Chrome has just as much bloatware as Edge, if not more. These features will start rolling out to Chrome in the United States, and expand to other regions in the future. I'm not looking forward to it. Source: Google
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Google brings Gemini and AI mode deeper into Chrome
It really looks like the Google Chrome omnibox will eventually be used for web addresses, searches, and Gemini prompts. Google is tying Gemini and Chrome closer together, allowing Gemini broader access to your Chrome tabs while quietly turning the address bar into an entry point for its AI Mode. Eventually, it'll add agentic browsing to Chrome as well. The latter point is likely what Google wants to signal to the broader market, since keeping pace with (or surpassing) other browser makers deploying agentic AI is seen as a leadership move. But agentic browsing will debut in the coming months, while Gemini's tighter integration with Chrome arrives soon, even today. A day ago, you could type "best laptops" in Microsoft Edge on your PC and receive a summary of Copilot's findings above a list of links. In Chrome, provided that you didn't have AI Mode enabled, Google would return just that list of search results. Later this month, Google is making the "omnibox" a repository for AI Mode: what was once the "address bar" over time became a search box, and now it's being transformed into something more. Essentially, Google seems a step away from merging Gemini and Search within Chrome, as it said in May-it just hasn't quite gotten there yet. Then, users were able to try out Gemini in Chrome with a paid subscription, allowing them to see the Gemini "sparkle" hovering above the content on the page. Today, Google has removed that paid limitation. Now that Gemini is being added to Chrome, users will be able to "ask" queries about the page via a sidebar. If you "search" via the omnibox, you may receive an "AI Mode" result. AI Mode in the omnibox will roll out later this month. Users can toggle between a traditional search and an AI Mode request by clicking the small AI Mode "chip". It's still unclear why Google has both an "omnibox" for web pages and search queries, plus a separate "box" dedicated to Gemini queries. Gemini in Chrome, however, can now draw on more of your own information for context: not just what's on the page, but also your other open Chrome tabs, your browser history, and even Google apps like Gmail and Calendar. Querying your browser history sounds a bit like Microsoft Recall, but without the fanfare or controversy. Here, Google suggests that you use a prompt like "what was the website that I saw the walnut desk on last week?" or "what was that blog I read on back to school shopping?" If you have a question about a page you're viewing, Google will supply some suggestions. Like Microsoft in Edge and Opera with its own version, Google has also demonstrated agentic browsing. However, it looks like every other agentic browser demo I've seen: give it a task and off goes the AI agents to complete it. In this case, Google already offered a sneak peek of agentic technology in May as "Project Mariner." When the process (in this case, a shopping task) completes, you're given a chance to look it over and then make a final decision to pay, or not. The idea is that agentic AI could be used to plan trips, handle shopping, or even combine the two. In this case, however, Google's agentic AI will be limited to English-language web pages, according to company executives. The feature will roll out "in the coming months," Google said. Google's AI is being applied to personal web security. It's not just detecting scams that might trick you into downloading software, it's also blocking sites that push fake contests or sweepstakes, and even cutting down on low-quality sites that request unusual permissions, like camera access. Google also said that it will use AI to detect compromised passwords that were leaked in a data breach. Today, it simply alerts you and points you to the site to change them. On certain sites, Google says it can now reset and securely store the updated password for you. There are some smart uses of AI here, but it also feels like Google is slowly easing us into a future where AI answers our queries instead of showing a list of links. What will that make Chrome, which began life as a web browser and now is evolving into a showcase for Google's AI? The jury's still out on that one -- well, not legally.
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Upgraded Gemini in Chrome rolling out to free users, agentic browsing coming soon
Gemini in Chrome for Mac and Windows will no longer require an AI Pro or AI Ultra subscription, while Google today also announced a number of upgrades. Google sees Gemini and other AI features in Chrome as "fundamentally changing the nature of browsing" by "moving from a passive experience to a more proactive and intelligent one." It's about creating a browser that goes beyond rendering the web, to one that understands it, helps you be more productive, and keeps you safer online. Meanwhile, Rick Osterloh (SVP of Platforms & Devices) said: "We're using the world's leading models to transform so many of our products, and Chrome is a great place to see our vision come to life for billions of people. We are evolving the browser to help you get the most from the web - in ways we didn't think possible even a few years ago. And we are doing it while keeping the speed, simplicity and safety of Chrome that so many people love." Following the initial launch at I/O 2025 in May, Gemini is rolling out to all Chrome for Windows and Mac users in the US (set to English) starting today. It's also coming to Google Workspace customers with enterprise-grade data protections and controls. Tapping the AI sparkle in the top-right corner opens a floating chat, with Gemini able to view your current page to help answer questions about it. It can now work across multiple open tabs to "quickly compare and summarize information." Planning your flight, hotel and vacation activities across multiple tabs? Gemini in Chrome can help you consolidate that information into a single itinerary to take the stress out of your travel plans. Meanwhile, Gemini in Chrome now has deeper integration with Google Calendar, Tasks, Drive, Docs/Sheets/Slides, Maps, and YouTube. If there are multiple events with dates on a page (or email), you can have Gemini add it to your Calendar. You can also enter a prompt to add events. ...if you're looking for a specific spot in a YouTube video, you can just ask Gemini in Chrome and it will take you there immediately. Gemini in Chrome will soon let you find previously visited pages. This allows for prompts like: "What was the website that I saw the walnut desk on last week" or "What was that blog I read on back to school shopping." In the coming months, Gemini in Chrome will get agentic capabilities. You can "tell Gemini in Chrome what you want to get done, and it acts on web pages on your behalf." Examples include booking a haircut or ordering groceries when you have a list of ingredients. Gemini in Chrome is able to click, scroll, and type on a website. If you ask Gemini to "Buy these ingredients for me on Instacart.com using the Sprouts store," it is: Gemini will always have you confirm the final step, like making the actual purchase. You can watch while this is happening, or switch to another tab. A glow indicates when Gemini is active, while you can take over at any time. On mobile, the Gemini overlay on Android will soon have access to the entire webpage instead of just your current screen. There's also a new "Summarize" chip, while Google is bringing Gemini to Chrome for iOS. Outside of Gemini, Chrome is bringing AI Mode into the address bar this month for faster prompt entry, while contextual suggestions in the Omnibox will "suggest relevant questions based on the context of the page to help you kickstart your search." This opens in the side panel. On the security front, Chrome is using AI for security. If Safe Browsing Enhanced Protection is enabled, on-device Gemini Nano will soon "stop sites that use fake viruses or fake giveaways to trick you." AI will also help cut down on intrusive site permission requests. Finally, AI is being used as a password agent that can change compromised passwords with a single click on sites like Coursera, Spotify, Duolingo, and H&M. This is coming soon.
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Chrome is getting 10 new AI features -- these are the 3 I'm most excited about
Google just gave Chrome a serious AI upgrade, rolling out 10 new features powered by its Gemini model. These new features are designed to make your browser more productive, smarter and a lot more personal. If you're like me and have 20 tabs open at any given time, and you've forgotten which page you saw those great running shoes on, Chrome's new AI features are designed for you. One feature can recall webpages you've visited, even if you can't remember the name. Another actually summarizes entire tabs and answers questions on the fly. There's even a "personal assistant mode" coming soon that can help you book appointments or handle errands online for you. Out of the ten new features, these three are the ones I'm most excited about. Starting this week for users in the U.S., Chrome now includes Gemini, Google's AI assistant. Directly inside your browser, you can ask it to explain, summarize and compare all your tabs. So next time you're reading an article and want to dive into the details or get clarification, Gemini can break it all down for you. Or, if you're comparing flights and hotel options, Gemini will give you a summary so you don't have to click back and forth. I can't tell you how many times I've gone down a rabbit hole, closed my laptop, and then a week later thought: where was that thing I wanted to check out again? With Chrome's new AI memory, I can just type in natural language. Something like "What was that standing desk I saw last week?" and Chrome pulls it up instantly. As someone juggling a lot, this one is sure to make my busy life much easier and productive. If you're someone who leaves 15 tabs open while researching (guilty!), Gemini can now analyze them all together. That means accessing summaries and takeaways faster and less tab hoarding. So instead of hopping back and forth between articles, I can get a single digest of what's important. For someone who's juggling work, researching, shopping for the family and keeping kids' schedules organized, this is a lifesaver. This one feels less flashy, but honestly, it's huge for me. Chrome now uses Gemini Nano in the background to detect phishing pages, fake virus pop-ups, and, yes, even those too-good-to-be-true giveaway scams. I've seen enough shady pop-ups on my parents' computer to know this is going to save a lot of people's headaches, and maybe even money. Hopefully this also means fewer interruptions from pop-ups. You know the ones that suddenly appear the minute you start reading? Chrome now lets you automatically say goodbye to those, keeping them from interrupting you for a better user experience. Now, if one of your saved passwords gets exposed in a data breach, Chrome will offer a one-click way to reset it on supported sites (like Spotify, Duolingo, etc.). Fast, without disrupting your online experience. Google Chrome is so much more than a browser now; it's essentially becoming an AI-powered assistant that works in the background while you work. These tools are designed to save you time, reduce mental clutter and make the web more useful and less chaotic. Of course, this does raise questions about privacy, particularly if your browser remembers everything. While there are ways to opt out, and Google says users will have stricter controls, users will need to weigh the pros and cons of these new features. If you're in the U.S. and using Chrome on a Mac or Windows PC, some of these AI features are available right now. More are coming soon -- especially the memory and agentic features. Make sure your browser is up to date and signed into your Google account to access the latest Gemini integrations.
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Google Adds Gemini AI to Chrome
Google today said that Gemini AI is being integrated into the Chrome browser for the Mac and PC. Chrome users in the U.S. will get the functionality first, with Gemini able to clarify complex information on any webpage. There will be a small Gemini symbol in the upper right side of the browser that will offer options like learn about the page or explore a topic when clicked. By default, the Ask Gemini interface will answer questions about the tab that you have open. Gemini in Chrome is able to work across multiple tabs, which is useful for comparing and summarizing information across several websites. It integrates with Google apps like Calendar, YouTube, and Maps to do things like locate a specific spot in a YouTube video or schedule meetings without leaving a webpage. Later this month, AI Mode search will be accessible directly from the Chrome address bar with support for long, complex questions. Gemini in Chrome will also be able to remember websites that you've visited, making it easier to search for a site that you want to revisit. Improved browsing protections are in the works as well, with Google expanding Safe Browsing to put a stop to sites using fake viruses or fake giveaways to phish for info. In the coming months, Gemini in Chrome will get agentic capabilities, allowing the AI assistant to handle "tedious tasks" like booking a haircut or ordering groceries. You will be able to tell Chrome what needs to be accomplished, and then Gemini will act on webpages to get the task done. Google also plans to bring Gemini to the Chrome app for iOS, with the feature coming in the near future.
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Gemini is coming to Chrome on desktop starting today for Pro and Ultra users in the U.S.
Google has officially started rolling out Gemini in Chrome to Pro and Ultra users in the United States. The long-rumored plan will embed the AI assistant in Google's popular web browser on both Mac and Windows, though only if the language is set to English. Chrome users will be able to employ Chrome essentially to follow along with their journey on the web, explaining text on websites, summarizing across their tabs, keeping them organized, and soon even doing their chores online. Google claims that this is a full-on redesign of how Chrome works. With Gemini onboard, your browser knows what page you're on, what tabs you have open, and what you were researching last week when you got distracted and clicked away. You can ask it questions about the current page, or even across several tabs. For instance, you could ask, "Can you compare the cancellation policies on these travel sites?" or "What are the key takeaways from these three news articles I have open?" It even pulls in information from your Google apps without forcing you to switch tabs. It can check Google Maps, scan YouTube, or look at your Calendar. "At Google, our vision for AI is to create technology that's truly helpful. We're using the world's leading models to transform so many of our products, and Chrome is a great place to see our vision come to life for billions of people," Rick Osterloh, SVP of Platforms & Devices at Google, said in a statement. "We are evolving the browser to help you get the most from the web - in ways we didn't think possible even a few years ago. And we are doing it while keeping the speed, simplicity and safety of Chrome that so many people love." In the next few months, that usefulness is going to get even more hands-on. Google is testing "agentic capabilities," which is their way of saying Gemini will soon start taking action on your behalf. Think booking a haircut, ordering groceries, or finding and filling out the right form for your driver's license, and without you having to click through every single link. You give Gemini a task, it handles the rest. You're still in control and can stop it at any point, but Chrome becomes more like a sidekick than a search engine. Even the Chrome omnibox, the address bar at the top of the window, is getting smarter with its own "AI Mode" feature that lets you ask long, complex questions right and get conversational answers back. It's kind of like asking Google Search something without having to open Google Search. That sense of AI blending into the background is very much by design. Of course, there are trade-offs. An AI-powered browser can be creepy if it overreaches, or confusing if it gets too proactive too fast. Gemini isn't perfect, and when it misfires, it'll be up to users to rein it back in. Google isn't just adding new buttons or tacking on tools, it's trying to redefine what it means to browse in an era when the web itself is increasingly shaped by AI. With Gemini in Chrome, they're betting that people don't just want faster browsing, they want the whole experience to be smarter.
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Go behind the browser with Chrome's new AI features
Today represents the biggest upgrade to Chrome in its history, as we share how we're using the latest in Google AI to enhance your browsing experience. We're building Google AI into Chrome across multiple levels so it can better anticipate your needs, help you understand more complex information and make you more productive when you browse the web, all while keeping you safe. Here are 10 new ways AI is helping us make Chrome smarter, safer and more useful than ever: Starting today, we're rolling out Gemini in Chrome to Mac and Windows desktop users in the U.S. with their language set to English, so you can ask Gemini to clarify complex information on any webpage (or webpages) you're reading. It'll be available to businesses in the coming weeks via Google Workspace with enterprise-grade data protections and controls. And we're also bringing Gemini in Chrome to mobile in the U.S., ensuring you'll always have access to our AI features, whether you're at home or on the go. You can also activate Gemini when using Chrome on Android, and other apps, by holding the power button. And starting soon, on iOS Gemini in Chrome will be built into the app.
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Google Chrome just got a massive AI upgrade -- 10 new features that reinvent your browser
Chrome is getting a massive AI update in the coming weeks thanks to an infusion of new Gemini-based features making AI integral to nearly every aspect of using Google's browser. Google outlined the updates in a blog post today (September 18). For those who've bought into AI, the new tools look useful; if you haven't, there's Vivaldi, a browser that is stridently anti-ai and built for online security (we would have suggested Firefox but it is also getting an AI chatbot). You'll know Gemini has arrived thanks to a new Gemini button on the desktop browser. Here's a closer look at what this Gemini infusion brings to Chrome. The new features can be boiled down to three categories: online security, Google search, and tab/website organization. A new Gemini button will open up side tab where you can ask questions about content in your open tabs. On mobile, Gemini already works with Chrome, but in iOS it will be built into the Chrome app. Google says that agentic capabilities are coming over the next few months to "handle tedious tasks" like booking a haircut or buying your food. You will tell Gemini what you want to do and it will act on web pages for you. For those who have kept AI Mode turned on, you'll now be able to access it right in the address bar (or what Google has dubbed the omnibox). This mode is supposed to let you ask longer and more complex questions to receive AI responses. In AI Mode, you can ask follow-up questions. This specific feature is supposed to launch before the end of September. In normal search, you'll still get the AI Overview and you can follow up with questions about the content in the tab in AI Mode. There will also be contextual suggestions if you can't think of your own. Google claims Gemini will be able to work across multiple tabs, meaning you could be doing trip research, while planning a flight and booking a hotel. Gemini is supposed to be able to consolidate all of that info into an itinerary if needed. Or you could wait for the experimental Split Tabs feature to become a full-fledged release. Additionally, Gemini is getting the ability to read your website history so you can give it prompts like "what was that blog I read on back to school shopping?" to find sites you previously visited. Non-Chrome apps like Maps, YouTube and Calendar are getting Gemini integration that would let you schedule appointments, or look up a location without leaving the webpage you're on. Doing so involves asking Gemini in Chrome using the Gemini button. A version of Gemini Nano is coming to Chrome as part of this AI expansion that would enhance the already existing Safe Browsing Enhanced Protection mode, which already uses Gemini Nano. This mode IDs tech support scams to stop you from downloading potentially harmful software. The updated version is also supposed to stop malicious sites from hitting you with fake viruses or fake giveways to trick people into clicking. Chrome will now use AI to learn your preferences to determine which sites are allowed to give you notifications while also blocking spam or scam notifications. Lastly, Chrome will be getting an AI password agent that will let you change saved passwords with a single click, but only on supported sites. Examples provided by Google include Spotify, Duolingo and H&M. It's unclear how many websites will support this feature. This is meant to expand on the password features that already exist in Chrome such as the ability to alert you about compromised passwords and login credentials autofilling. Chrome is one of the most popular browsers in the world, so this Gemini integration is going to put AI features in front of more people in the coming weeks and months. Not every Gemini feature announced by Google will be available right away. Some, as mentioned, are rolling out in the coming months while others like the updated AI mode are supposed to launch by the end of the month. Subscribers to Google AI Pro and Google AI Ultra will have already seen some of these features. As with most Google rollouts, just because a feature launched today, it doesn't mean you'll get it right away. It could take a few days for you to see any of these updates in Chrome.
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Google Brings 10 New AI Features to Chrome, Including Gemini Integration
The updates include Gemini integration, AI-powered browsing assistance and expanded online safety protections, and will roll out gradually in English in the US before expanding to more countries and languages. Google announced on Thursday the rollout of 10 new artificial intelligence (AI) features in its Chrome browser, calling it the biggest upgrade in Chrome's history. The updates include Gemini integration, AI-powered browsing assistance and expanded online safety protections, and will roll out gradually in English in the US before expanding to more countries and languages. "Today represents the biggest upgrade to Chrome in its history, as we share how we're using the latest in Google AI to enhance your browsing experience," said Mike Torres, vice president of product for Chrome. The company is introducing Gemini in Chrome for Mac and Windows desktop users in the US, with plans to extend to mobile platforms and Google Workspace in the coming weeks. Users will be able to ask Gemini to explain or summarise information on webpages and across multiple tabs. Upcoming updates will add agentic capabilities, allowing Gemini to perform actions such as booking appointments or placing grocery orders on behalf of users. Torres said these features can be stopped at any time, giving users control. Chrome will also allow users to recall websites they visited in the past using prompts such as "what was the website that I saw the walnut desk on last week?" In addition, Gemini will work more closely with Google apps like Calendar, YouTube and Maps without requiring users to switch tabs. The browser is also adding AI Mode in the omnibox, enabling longer and more complex queries directly from the address bar. Contextual AI Overviews will appear in a side panel, offering quick answers to questions about the page being viewed. On the security front, Gemini Nano will strengthen Chrome's Safe Browsing Enhanced Protection mode by identifying scams involving fake viruses or giveaways. Chrome will also use AI to reduce unwanted notifications and learn user preferences for handling site permission requests. According to Google, Chrome on Android has already cut around 3 billion unwanted notifications daily through AI-driven detection of spammy alerts.
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Google is transforming Chrome into an AI-native browser - SiliconANGLE
Google LLC has long used its Chrome web browser as a weapon to boost the popularity of its products and services, notably to strengthen its dominance in search, and now it's doing the same for artificial intelligence. The company today revealed it's enhancing Chrome with a host of new AI features powered by its AI assistant Gemini. It's increasing the prominence of its AI mode, which is its more conversational search utility, and will also integrate AI agents into the browser, so users will be able to ask it to complete browsing tasks on their behalf. In a blog post, Mike Torres, Chrome's vice president of product, said users will soon be able to call up AI Mode from right within the browser's address bar. It's going to add a new tool called the "omnibox", where people will be able to type out a search phrase or ask a question and receive a conversational response without leaving the page they're currently viewing. Google is also integrating the Gemini AI assistant within Chrome, so users will be able to ask it questions about the web page they are viewing. It will also be able to see all of their other open tabs and answer questions about them too, Torres said. This feature has been around for a few months already, but was only available to paid users, but it's now being made free. Gemini could help users to compare and summarize information from multiple open tabs. So if someone is searching for flights, a hotel and activities across several different websites, they can ask Gemini to consolidate what they've found in a single itinerary. According to Torres, Gemini will be able to remember user's browsing histories to better understand the context of their queries. It will also link Chrome to other Google services, such as YouTube and Google Calendar, he said. Google launched the Chrome browser back in 2008 and it has since become the world's most popular, commanding around 70% of the global web browser market share, according to Statcounter. The company has leveraged its browsing dominance to ensure that Google retains its dominance in search, and every time someone buys a new device, it immediately asks users if they want Google to be their "default" search engine. In addition, the browser also collects useful data from users that helps to improve its search algorithms. The company has gotten into trouble for this practice, and in a recent antitrust lawsuit brought by the U.S. Justice Department, it's being forced to end this practice and offer users a choice of default search engines, and also share some of its search data. However, it's clear that the Chrome strategy worked, and now Google seems to be doing the same thing with its AI services. By integrating Gemini with Chrome, it can help to increase its market share at the expense of other AI chatbots, such as OpenAI's ChatGPT, and gather more data on how people are using AI. Gemini is being rolled out in Chrome now, but it will be a few months before one of the most impactful new AI features becomes available. Torres said the company is planning to launch an "agentic browsing assistant", which will be able to complete various browser-related tasks autonomously on behalf of users. The Chrome agent will be able to do things such as fill up an Amazon shopping basket, write replies to emails, copy and paste information from websites into a document so it's easier to access, and so on. The agentic experience will be able to run in the background, so it will be possible to instruct it to go shopping for products on Amazon, while the user can continue doing something else in Chrome. However, should the agent need to clarify something, such as the user's preferred brand of jeans, it will interrupt them to ask. Torres said the agent will also ask for confirmation before completing irreversible actions, such as actually sending the emails it has written or checking out and paying for goods on Amazon. In such cases, it will ask users for explicit permission before it does these things. However, it's not clear if this may change in future, given that just yesterday, Google revealed that it's working on an agentic payments protocol called AP2, which will ultimately enable AI agents to make pre-authorized payments on behalf of users. Google isn't the first to launch a browser agent. In fact, it's a bit late to this game, with OpenAI's Operator and Anthropic PBC's Claude for Chrome offering similar autonomous browsing functionality. These features remain in their infancy though, so it's not sure how useful Google's Chrome agent will actually be. In the case of OpenAI's Operator, it appears that it's still prone to glitches and not always reliable. It's also fairly slow, and it's pricey too. The feature is locked behind a $200 per month paywall, and even then, usage is restricted as it uses a mountain of "tokens" as it browses autonomously. Still, Google may have an advantage in the fact that its AI agent will be "native" to Chrome, and Torres said the company has been following its rivals' experiments and will make sure its offering is "more robust" by the time it launches. It's notable that this is something the company has been working on for almost one year already, so it may well be able to do it better than its rivals. "Our hope, by the time this gets to users, is that we've done away with many of those potential snafus," he said. Google didn't say if it intends to make Chrome's agentic capabilities a paid feature, but it would be surprising if it's made available for free.
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Google Supercharges Chrome with Gemini AI to Take On Perplexity's Comet Browser - Phandroid
Google just dropped what might be Chrome's biggest update ever. It's all about staying ahead in the AI browser wars. The search giant is rolling out Gemini AI integration to all Chrome users in the US. This makes powerful AI assistance available right in your browser without any subscription fees. The move puts Google in direct competition with Perplexity's Comet browser, which costs $200 per month and remains invite-only. The new Gemini Chrome AI features let you ask questions about any webpage you're reading. You can get summaries across multiple tabs and have the AI explain complex topics without switching apps. Access it through a simple icon in Chrome's toolbar or by setting up a keyboard shortcut. Google calls this "the biggest upgrade to Chrome in its history." It's rolling out just as AI-powered browsers like Perplexity's Comet are trying to steal market share. Here's where Google has a massive edge over competitors like Perplexity's Comet. Chrome currently holds 68% of the global browser market share. This means Google can instantly deliver AI features to billions of users worldwide. Meanwhile, Comet remains limited to Perplexity's $200-per-month Max subscribers and a small group of invitees. That's a tiny fraction compared to Chrome's massive user base. Google isn't stopping there either. The company plans to add agentic AI capabilities in the coming months. Gemini will actually perform tasks like booking appointments or ordering groceries. Chrome is also getting AI-powered security features and automatic password changes to keep users safer online. While Perplexity's Comet offers some impressive AI browsing features, Google's approach might be smarter. When you can reach billions of users instantly versus a small group of premium subscribers, the winner seems pretty obvious.
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Google Rolls Out Gemini in Chrome to Introduce These New AI Features
Google has not confirmed when the feature will roll out in India Google has started rolling out the Gemini in Chrome upgrade for users in select regions, bringing artificial intelligence (AI) agentic capabilities to the browser, the search engine giant announced on Thursday. Presently, it is available to all macOS and Windows users in the US who have set their language to English. Additionally, Google is also rolling out Gemini in Chrome to mobile users in the country. The company claims that this will enhance a user's browsing experience on Chrome. Gemini in Chrome Brings New AI Features to the Browser In a blog post, Mike Torres, Vice President of Product for Chrome, announced that the California-based tech giant has started rolling out Gemini in Chrome to all users in the US who have selected English as their Chrome language on Windows and macOS. It was previously available only to Google AI Pro and Google AI Ultra subscribers in the US, and is now being released to a wider user base. Users can activate Gemini in Chrome by clicking on the Gemini logo, which will appear in the top right corner of the browser window. With this integration, Chrome can now compare and summarise information for users from across different tabs. It will also get a new AI-enabled recall feature, which will eliminate the need for people to scroll through their web history to find a particular piece of information from a previously visited webpage. Gemini in Chrome is also capable of fetching information for users from different Google apps, too, like Google Calendar, YouTube, and Google Maps. It will summarise the same in one place, without needing them to leave their current tab. Moreover, Google is also integrating AI search in the address bar, which the company calls Omnibox. Users will be able to activate AI Mode while typing a URL or searching from the address bar. On top of this, Gemini in Chrome will now allow people to ask questions about the webpage they are viewing from the omnibox. The answers to the questions will appear along with the webpage with the help of the AI Overview from Search. Users can also ask follow-up queries in AI Mode. Currently available in the US in English, Google plans to release these features in other regions and languages in the coming weeks. Google will also introduce agentic capabilities to Gemini in Chrome in the following months, which will allow users to hand over tasks, such as booking a haircut appointment or ordering groceries, to the browser. Additionally, the California-based tech giant is also bringing new safety features with the integration of Gemini into Chrome. The company will soon expand the functionality of Enhanced Protection mode, which uses Gemini Nano, to stop websites from duping users with fake viruses and giveaways. Gemini in Chrome will also prompt permission requests "in a less intrusive" manner, while analysing user preferences and site quality. In the near future, Gemini in Chrome will also act as a user's password agent, allowing them to change their passwords with a "single click" on select websites and web portals, like Coursera, Spotify, Duolingo, and H&M. This marks Google's entry into the AI-powered browsers space. In July, Perplexity launched its AI-enabled Comet Browser, which features an in-built sidebar and is powered by the company's native search engine.
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Browser battles: Chrome's AI upgrade takes aim at Perplexity's Comet - The Economic Times
Currently available in the US, Gemini can clarify user queries on any webpage and even across multiple tabs on Mac, Windows desktop, and Android devices. The company said the feature will also be available to businesses in the coming weeks through Google Workspace, and added that Gemini will soon be built into iOS.Google has announced the introduction of AI capabilities in its Chrome browser on Thursday, competing with rival Perplexity's Comet AI browser. Chrome is now integrated with Gemini, Google's AI chatbot that helps users easily understand complex information. Currently available in the US, Gemini can clarify user queries on any webpage and even across multiple tabs on Mac, Windows desktop, and Android devices. The company said the feature will also be available to businesses in the coming weeks through Google Workspace, and added that Gemini will soon be built into iOS. In Chrome and Google apps, Gemini syncs with apps like Calendar, YouTube, and Maps, and can be accessed without leaving the page users are on. Additionally, users can access Google Search's AI mode from the Chrome address bar. This update will be rolled out later this month in the US (English-language support only) and will expand to more countries and languages in the weeks ahead. Protection from scams Google has prioritised user safety and security to help them navigate threats on the web, and Gemini Nano will identify tech support scams that trick users to download harmful software. The company said it will expand the protection to sites that use anti-viruses or giveaways to trick users. Chrome will also detect potentially spammy or scammy notifications and give the option of seeing them or unsubscribing. The company claimed that since rolling out this feature, it has reduced unwanted notifications for Android users by around 3 billion each day. To secure passwords, Chrome will proactively alert if any password is compromised and it'll use an AI password agent to go a step further, by letting the user change saved passwords with a single click on supported sites. Similarities with Perplexity's Comet Google announced plans to introduce agentic capabilities in Gemini in the coming months, similar to Comet. Gemini would perform tasks based on a single command by the user, such as booking a haircut or ordering online. It can work across multiple tabs, allowing users to quickly compare and summarise information across multiple websites. In use-cases like planning your flight, hotel, and vacation across multiple tabs, the browser will consolidate the information into a single itinerary. Rising competition In Comet, too, users can prompt to summarise webpages, compare products, translate content, or perform follow-up actions -- all within a single interface, without switching between tabs or tools. Unlike Comet though, Google's AI browser can find webpages the user previously visited without scrolling through the history. This feature, which is yet to be rolled out, will jot down the links you visited in the past based on the prompts you gave. Perplexity founder Aravind Srinivas said in July that he sees Comet becoming an "AI operating system" that executes everyday tasks in the background through natural language commands, minimising the need for manual input. A Reuters report on July 9 said OpenAI is also working on an AI browser, aiming to challenge Google's dominance in search and advertising. Despite this, Srinivas said he's not concerned about big tech rivals like OpenAI, Google, or Anthropic copying Comet. "It's natural, when there is a lot of money to be made in a certain sector, people are going to try to copy it, but there is only a limited number of things you can be world-class at, whether it is building great models or building one or two really good products. So, you are obviously not going to win at everything," he said while addressing aspiring entrepreneurs at Y Combinator's startup batch in July. Perplexity's play for Chrome Last month, Reuters reported that Perplexity had made a $34.5 billion unsolicited all-cash offer for Chrome, a bid far above its own valuation. Perplexity claims to have lined up investors willing to support this deal, but details on the funding remains unclear. The company's bid pledges to keep the underlying browser code called Chromium open source, invest $3 billion over two years, and make no changes to Chrome's default search engine. Also Read: Perplexity Google Chrome bid: All you need to know about the $34.5 billion offer
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Google's Chrome 'Biggest Upgrade' In History With Gemini AI: 5 Keys To Know
Starting this week, Google's Gemini AI technology will be integrated into the world's most popular web browser, Chrome, with new features to streamline tasks and navigate the internet more intuitively. Here are five key features and things to know. Google is integrating Gemini AI directly into its popular Chrome browser this week for millions of users, a move being dubbed as Chrome's biggest upgrade in its history. Gemini will first be integrated into desktops in the U.S. for Mac and Windows users with the goal of streamlining tasks, boosting security and making navigating the internet more intuitive. Gemini inside Chrome will soon launch on Android and Apple iOS. "This represents the biggest upgrade to Chrome in its history," said Mike Torres, vice president of product for Google Chrome, in a blog post. "We're building Google AI into Chrome across multiple levels so it can better anticipate your needs, help you understand more complex information and make you more productive when you browse the web," Torres said. "All while keeping you safe." [Related: Google Cloud President On Topping Microsoft In AI And Channel GTM] Gemini in Chrome will roll out to business users in the coming weeks via Google Workspace in the U.S. Here are the five keys to know about Gemini being built into Google Chrome. Gemini In Chrome The new Gemini in Chrome can understand the context of what users are doing across multiple tabs, answer questions and integrate with other Google services like Google Docs and Calendar. Gemini aims to help users clarify complex information on any webpage or multiple webpages. "Imagine you're a student researching a topic for a paper, and you have dozens of tabs open. Instead of spending hours jumping between sources and trying to connect the dots, your new AI browsing assistant -- Gemini in Chrome -- can do it for you," said Parisa Tabriz, vice president of Google Chrome, in a blog post. "Gemini can answer questions about articles, find references within YouTube videos, and will soon be able to help you find pages you've visited so you can pick up exactly where you left off." Agentic AI In Google Chrome The tech giant will add agentic AI capabilities into Chrome that can perform multistep tasks via Gemini. Users can tell Gemini in Chrome what they want to get done, so Gemini can act on webpages on their behalf. For example, the agentic technology will enable summarization of content from multiple websites or even have Gemini book people's haircuts and order groceries. "We're developing more advanced agentic capabilities for Gemini in Chrome that can perform multistep tasks for you from start to finish, like ordering groceries. You'll remain in control as Chrome handles the tedious work, turning 30-minute chores into three-click user journeys," said Tabriz. Chrome Address Bar's New 'AI Mode' Google Gemini is adding its most powerful AI search ability, dubbed AI Mode, to the Chrome address bar. AI Mode allows users to ask longer, more complex questions and get a helpful AI response, with the ability to ask follow-up questions in AI Mode and dive deeper on the web. Chrome can suggest relevant questions based on the context of the page. "You can use AI Mode to ask complex, multipart questions from the same place you already search and browse the web. You can then dive deeper by asking follow-up questions and exploring relevant web links," said Tabriz. "For example, if you're shopping for a mattress, [AI Mode] might suggest follow-ups searches like 'What's the warranty policy?' This makes getting information from the Chrome [AI Mode] simpler than ever before," Tabriz said. Chrome Security Boosts, Gemini Nano Google said it's continuing to evolve how the company uses AI to help users navigate threats on the web. Safe Browsing's Enhanced Protection mode uses Gemini Nano to help identify tech support scams that try to trick Chrome users into downloading harmful software. "Soon, we'll be expanding this protection to also stop sites that use fake viruses or fake giveaways to trick you," said Torres. Another security feature includes Chrome now using AI to learn a user's preferences and to take into account signals like site quality. In addition, Gemini in Chrome will use AI as a password agent to enable users to change saved passwords with a single click on supported sites like Spotify, Coursera, H&M and more. "The browser is no longer just a window to the web; it's an intelligent partner that learns and adapts to your needs. This next era of Chrome is all about making the web even more helpful, more secure and more intuitive," said Tabriz. Google Doesn't Have To Sell Off Chrome After years of legal battles, a federal judge this month said Google does not have to sell its Chrome web browser business to avoid alleged anti-monopoly practices. A ruling this month by Judge Amit Mehta lets Google retain control of Chrome and Android mobile operating system, while barring certain exclusive contracts with device makers, such as Apple, and browser developers. Google can still make payments to partners such as Apple to feature its search engine. However, Google has been ordered to share data with rival companies in a move to open up competition in the online search market. This ruling has paved the way for Google to officially launch Gemini inside Chrome.
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Google Chrome 2.0 : AI-Powered Browser With New AI Agentic Features
What if your browser could do more than just open websites? Imagine a tool that not only helps you navigate the web but also acts as your personal assistant, summarizing dense articles, automating tedious tasks, and even predicting what you need before you ask. With the release of Google Chrome 2.0, this vision is no longer hypothetical. Powered by the innovative Gemini AI, Chrome has transformed into a dynamic, AI-driven platform that redefines what it means to browse the internet. This isn't just an upgrade; it's a bold leap into the future of productivity and intelligent technology. In this overview, AISeeKing explore how Chrome's agentic features and AI-powered tools are reshaping the way users interact with the web. From automating everyday tasks like booking appointments to offering context-aware assistance across multiple tabs, Chrome's latest update promises to save time while enhancing efficiency. But it doesn't stop there, this new era of browsing also comes with deeper integration into Google's ecosystem, seamless multitasking capabilities, and a renewed focus on privacy and security. Whether you're a professional juggling deadlines or a curious learner diving into complex topics, Chrome 2.0 offers a smarter, more intuitive way to navigate the digital world. Could this be the future of browsing we've all been waiting for? The integration of Gemini AI introduces a smarter, more intuitive browsing experience. This AI system is capable of summarizing dense content, explaining complex terms, and offering clarity directly within the browser. For instance, if you are reading a technical article, Gemini can generate a concise summary or break down jargon into simpler, more digestible explanations. One of Gemini's standout features is its context-aware assistance across multiple tabs. If you are conducting research and switching between pages, the AI can recall your browsing history and provide insights through natural language queries. This eliminates the need to manually sift through tabs, saving valuable time and effort. Whether you're a student, a professional, or simply a curious reader, Gemini's ability to adapt to your needs ensures a seamless and efficient browsing experience. Chrome's new agentic features elevate automation to an unprecedented level, handling repetitive tasks such as booking appointments, filling out forms, or navigating websites. For example, if you are planning a trip, Chrome can search for flights, compare prices, and even complete the booking process based on your preferences. Despite this high level of automation, you retain full control. You can pause, modify, or stop these processes at any time, making sure that while Chrome works to save you time, the final decisions remain in your hands. This balance between automation and user control makes Chrome an invaluable tool for managing both personal and professional tasks efficiently. Take a look at other insightful guides from our broad collection that might capture your interest in AI browsers. A key highlight of this update is Chrome's deeper integration with Google's suite of applications, including Gmail, Calendar, YouTube, and Maps. This connectivity allows users to perform tasks directly within the browser, eliminating the need to switch between apps and enhancing overall productivity. For example: This seamless interaction between Chrome and Google's ecosystem ensures a cohesive and efficient user experience, making it easier to manage tasks and access information. Chrome's Omnibox, or address bar, now incorporates AI-powered search capabilities that provide contextual suggestions and follow-up questions based on the content you are viewing. Whether you are troubleshooting a technical issue, conducting research, or simply exploring a topic, the AI can guide you to the most relevant information. For instance, if you are reading software documentation, the Omnibox might suggest related articles or even answer specific questions about the tool's functionality. This feature is particularly beneficial for professionals navigating complex or unfamiliar material, as it reduces the time spent searching for supplementary information and enhances overall productivity. While these AI-driven features offer significant benefits, they also raise important questions about privacy and data security. Google has implemented enterprise-grade protections for businesses using Chrome through Google Workspace, making sure that sensitive information is safeguarded against potential threats. However, features like browsing history recall and context-aware assistance require data processing, which may be a concern for privacy-conscious users. To address this, Chrome includes customizable privacy settings that allow you to control how your data is used. By reviewing and adjusting these settings, you can make informed decisions about allowing or disabling specific features, making sure that your browsing experience aligns with your privacy preferences. Google's commitment to innovation is evident in its plans to expand Chrome's agentic browsing capabilities with future updates. These developments aim to refine and enhance the browser's AI tools, solidifying Chrome's position as a leader in AI-powered browsing. By using Google's extensive ecosystem, Chrome offers a comprehensive solution that appeals to both individual users and enterprises. Competing browsers like Comet, DIA, and ArkMax will need to innovate rapidly to keep pace with Chrome's advancements. With its ability to integrate AI directly into the browser and align it with Google's services, Chrome sets a new standard for convenience, efficiency, and intelligent technology in web browsing. As Chrome continues to evolve, it is poised to remain at the forefront of the industry, offering users a browsing experience that is not only smarter but also more secure and user-centric.
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Google Chrome Joins AI Browser Race with AI Mode and AI Agent Integration
These features will start rolling out to Windows and Mac users in the US at no additional cost. Google is rolling out AI mode in Chrome with deeper Gemini integration for all Mac and Windows users in the US, and this time, you don't need a subscription to use this feature. You can now access Google's AI mode right from the Chrome address bar and get smarter results for your search queries in the browser. Google will display helpful information through AI Overviews, and you will have the option to ask follow-up questions for a better understanding of the topic. However, this feature is currently limited to US users who have set their default language to English. The addition of Gemini in Chrome further improves upon the experience, as you can ask it to simplify or break down any information displayed in any tab. It can even work across multiple tabs as well. For example, if you have opened multiple tabs around which smartphone to buy, you can ask Gemini to compare all devices across tabs and create a detailed table. Gemini in Google Chrome will also work better with Google's suite of apps like YouTube, Calendar, Maps, and more. So you can ask Gemini in Chrome to set a calendar event based on the release date of a product or jump to a specific portion of a YouTube video. These features will also come to Google Workspace for regular and Enterprise users. In the coming months, Google will also add some agentic capabilities to Chrome with Gemini. Users will be able to restore closed tabs by asking Gemini. Or ask it to pull up something specific from their browsing history. Like, you can ask, "Which site was I reading about Spotify lossless yesterday?" However, Google has not mentioned a specific date. Google also mentioned in the announcement that the Gemini AI agent will be able to perform complex tasks for you. This includes booking appointments, or buying something, taking you to the very last step to complete the transaction. Chrome's director of product management, Charmaine D'Silva, said that it won't perform any tasks that are considered "high-risk" or "irreversible". Chrome will also see Gemini Nano integration, which will alert users against online scams and suggest new passwords for supported websites. With AI companies putting all their efforts into developing web browsers with agentic capabilities, such as Perplexity's Comet and OpenAI's upcoming Neon browser, rumored to be a "Chrome killer", it was about time Google responded. Bringing Gemini to Google Chrome, which happens to be the most popular browser in the world, could massively disrupt the plans of OpenAI and other AI startups. People are more likely to stick with what they already know, and switching web browsers is not something one does as often. But it will all come down to how well Google integrates Gemini's AI agent in Chrome.
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Sundar Pichai Declares 'Next Chrome Era' As Google Bakes Gemini AI Into Its Web Browser, Roll Out To Target Mac, Windows And Mobile Devices - Alphabet (NASDAQ:GOOG)
Google, owned by Alphabet Inc. GOOG GOOGL)), has built its Gemini AI directly into the Chrome browser. CEO Sundar Pichai says this marks the beginning of a new era in web browsing. Google Pushes AI Deeper Into Chrome On Thursday, Alphabet announced that Gemini AI is being integrated into Chrome for U.S. users on Mac, Windows and mobile devices. The update allows users to ask Gemini to summarize webpages, navigate across tabs, or perform tasks within a single tab, such as scheduling meetings or searching for content. It integrates Gemini with core Google services, including Calendar, YouTube and Maps, enabling users to access tools without leaving their browser. In a post on X, formerly Twitter, Pichai highlighted Chrome's evolving role. "From the beginning, we had clear goals for Chrome: simplicity, speed, and security. And now with AI, we have a chance to make the browser even safer, more intelligent and helpful," he wrote, adding, "Our next Chrome era is just beginning." See Also: Ross Gerber Says Alphabet Stock Is 'Inexpensive': Analyst Cites 4 Factors Why Google-Parent Is Undervalued Compared To Mega Cap Peers Agentic AI Features On The Way Google said new agentic AI features are coming, building on an internal project called Project Mariner. In the coming months, users will be able to ask Gemini to perform tasks such as booking a haircut or ordering groceries, expanding Chrome's role from browsing to active problem-solving. Enterprise customers will also see Gemini features added to Google Workspace, with Google promising "enterprise-grade data protections," said Mike Torres, vice president of product in a blog post. Competitive AI Browser Landscape The move comes as AI startups launch their own browsers. OpenAI is developing a Chromium-based browser after debuting its Operator agent earlier this year. Anthropic has released a browser-based Claude agent, while Perplexity introduced its Comet browser in July. Meanwhile, earlier this month, Judge Amit Mehta ruled that Google will not have to sell off Chrome or its Android operating system, rejecting calls for forced divestitures. The decision follows a five-year antitrust battle, in which the court previously found Google guilty of maintaining an illegal monopoly in search. Price Action: On Thursday, Alphabet's Class A stock rose 1% to close at $252.03, while Class C shares ended 0.99% higher at $252.33, per Benzinga Pro. Benzinga's Edge Stock Rankings indicate that GOOGL remains on an upward trajectory across short, medium and long-term periods, with additional performance details available here. Read Next: Sundar Pichai Says He's 'Excited' About Teaming Up With PayPal On AI Shopping And Payments: PYPL Spikes After Hours Photo Courtesy: Hadrian On Shutterstock.com Disclaimer: This content was partially produced with the help of AI tools and was reviewed and published by Benzinga editors. GOOGAlphabet Inc$253.041.28%Stock Score Locked: Want to See it? Benzinga Rankings give you vital metrics on any stock - anytime. Reveal Full ScoreEdge RankingsMomentum87.83Growth79.25Quality88.76Value39.22Price TrendShortMediumLongOverviewMarket News and Data brought to you by Benzinga APIs
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Google Turns Browser Into AI Assistant With Gemini | PYMNTS.com
By completing this form, you agree to receive marketing communications from PYMNTS and to the sharing of your information with our sponsor, if applicable, in accordance with our Privacy Policy and Terms and Conditions. The move, detailed in two Thursday (Sept. 18) company blog posts, underscores Google's effort to turn Chrome from a gateway to the web into a platform for AI-driven productivity and commerce. The immediate updates center on making AI accessible in everyday browsing. A new Gemini button on desktop Chrome lets users summarize or compare content across multiple tabs. The browser's omnibox will support "AI Mode" searches, producing contextual answers in a side panel, while users can also prompt Chrome to "ask about this page" to generate clarifications or overviews. Google is also framing AI as a new security layer. Chrome's password manager will soon offer one-click resets for compromised credentials, and Gemini Nano will detect scams such as fake virus warnings and fraudulent sweepstakes. Integration with services like YouTube, Calendar and Maps means Gemini can pull context from across a user's Google ecosystem without requiring extra clicks. The more ambitious shift comes later this year. Chrome will add agentic capabilities, allowing Gemini to handle tasks on behalf of users, from booking appointments to completing online orders. To make these interactions safer, the company is introducing an Agent Payments Protocol designed to standardize how AI agents initiate purchases, with built-in auditability and consumer protections. As part of the rollout, Google also expanded its partnership with PayPal, enabling Gemini agents to execute branded checkouts directly within Chrome. The move reflects Google's intent to shape not only how users browse but also how they transact, positioning Chrome as a platform for automated commerce. For Google, the strategy is about ensuring Chrome remains central in an AI-first internet. By embedding Gemini across tabs, search and commerce, Chrome becomes more than a browser; it becomes an environment where AI mediates actions and reduces friction. That creates stronger ties to Google's broader ecosystem and raises switching costs for users. Competitors are circling the same opportunity. Microsoft brought Copilot deeper into its Edge browser, while OpenAI and Anthropic have experimented with AI agents that control the browser directly. Yet, Google's advantage lies in scale. Chrome commands more than half the global browser market, giving Gemini's agentic features a distribution rivals can't match. If users grow accustomed to AI being the default mode of browsing, Chrome could become the de facto standard for how agentic computing takes shape, leapfrogging smaller competitors that remain gated behind premium subscriptions or limited pilots. The risks are considerable. Running agentic systems at scale is expensive, prone to errors and likely to attract regulatory scrutiny, especially in payments. However, Google's bet is that browsers will evolve from passive viewers of the web to active participants in it, with AI as the driver. If that vision holds, Chrome won't just keep pace with the AI transition. It could be the place where billions of people experience it first.
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Google Chrome gets Gemini AI assistant, AI Mode in omnibox, agentic tasks and more
Google has announced the largest update to Chrome since its 2008 launch, introducing AI-powered features designed to make browsing smarter, more productive, and secure. The updates highlight the integration of Gemini directly into Chrome, enhancements to the omnibox with AI Mode, and expanded AI-driven safety protections. Chrome now goes beyond rendering pages -- it understands context, assists with multi-tab tasks, summarizes content, and maintains online safety. 1. Enhance Your Browsing with Gemini in Chrome Gemini in Chrome clarifies complex information, summarizes multiple pages, and retrieves previously visited websites. It can answer questions about articles or extract references from YouTube videos. Gemini will soon perform multi-step tasks such as booking appointments or ordering groceries, with full user control to pause or stop actions at any time. Gemini works across multiple tabs to consolidate information. For example, travel planning across flights, hotels, and activities can be summarized into a single itinerary. Users can request Gemini to retrieve past websites without searching history. Example prompts: "What was the website that showed the walnut desk last week?" or "Which blog did I read on back-to-school shopping?" Gemini connects with apps such as Calendar, YouTube, and Maps, allowing scheduling, locating video timestamps, or checking locations without switching tabs. The Chrome omnibox now includes AI Mode, enabling longer, complex queries, follow-ups, and context-aware responses, providing AI-powered answers directly from the address bar. Users can ask questions about the page they are viewing. Chrome suggests relevant queries and provides AI Overviews, allowing information retrieval without leaving the page. Safe Browsing's Enhanced Protection uses Gemini Nano to identify tech support scams, fake viruses, and fraudulent giveaways. 9. Reduce Spammy Notifications and Manage Permissions Chrome detects potentially spammy notifications and allows users to unsubscribe. AI also manages permission requests based on site quality and user behavior. Android users now receive ~3 billion fewer unwanted notifications per day. Chrome alerts users if passwords are compromised and will soon allow one-click password updates on supported sites like Coursera, Spotify, Duolingo, and H&M. Autofill continues to securely store and fill credentials.
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Google to Add Agentic Capabilities and Other AI-Powered Features to Chrome Browser | PYMNTS.com
By completing this form, you agree to receive marketing communications from PYMNTS and to the sharing of your information with our sponsor, if applicable, in accordance with our Privacy Policy and Terms and Conditions. "Today represents the biggest upgrade to Chrome in its history, as we share how we're using the latest in Google AI to enhance your browsing experience," Mike Torres, vice president of product, Chrome, said in a Thursday blog post. New AI-powered features that are now available through Gemini in Chrome and other tools allow users to ask Gemini to clarify complex information on one or more webpages; work across multiple tabs to help users compare and summarize information from different websites; get information from other Google apps while the user remains on the page they are already on; and bolster the protection offered against unwanted permissions and notifications, according to the post. In the coming months, the browser will get agentic capabilities so that users can tell it to do things like book a haircut or order groceries; will help users find webpages they previously visited; will enable users to access Google Search's AI Mode from the Chrome address bar; will expand upon the protection currently provided by Gemini Nano to stop sites from delivering viruses or fake giveaways; and will help users change their passwords on supported sites with one click, per the post. Google and PayPal announced Wednesday that they are collaborating on agentic shopping and commerce experiences and other initiatives to advance agentic commerce. The partnership includes embedding PayPal's branded checkout, Hyperwallet global payout capabilities and PayPal Payouts mass payments solutions across Google's platforms. On Tuesday (Sept. 16), Google introduced the Agent Payments Protocol, which is designed to standardize how AI agents authorize and complete purchases, while giving banks and merchants a clean audit trail. The company framed this protocol, AP2, as a foundation for AI-driven commerce in which automated transactions carry the same accountability as human clicks. In May, Google announced that it integrated Gemini Nano, its on-device large language model, into Chrome's Enhanced Protection mode on desktop. The company said this model analyzes websites in real time to detect and warn users about threats such as tech support scams that use pop-ups and full-screen takeovers.
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Google integrates Gemini into Chrome By Investing.com
Investing.com -- Google has today launched what it calls the "biggest upgrade to Chrome in its history" by integrating Google AI features across the browser to enhance user experience. The company is rolling out Gemini in Chrome to Mac and Windows desktop users in the United States with English language settings. This feature allows users to ask Gemini to clarify complex information on webpages they're reading. Business users will gain access in the coming weeks through Google Workspace, while mobile versions for Android and iOS are also being deployed. One of the most significant upcoming features is "agentic capabilities" that will allow Gemini to handle repetitive tasks like booking appointments or ordering groceries on behalf of users. The AI assistant can now work across multiple tabs, helping users compare and summarize information from different websites. Soon, it will also be able to recall previously visited webpages based on user prompts. Google has created deeper integration between Gemini in Chrome and other Google apps including Calendar, YouTube, and Maps, allowing users to schedule meetings or access location details without changing tabs. Users will soon be able to access Google Search's AI Mode directly from Chrome's address bar, with this feature rolling out later this month in English in the U.S. before expanding to more countries. Chrome is also enhancing security features, using Gemini Nano to identify tech support scams and will soon expand protection against fake virus alerts and giveaways. The browser now detects potentially spammy notifications, having already reduced unwanted notifications for Android users by approximately 3 billion each day. Additionally, Chrome will soon use AI as a password agent to change compromised passwords with a single click on supported sites like Coursera, Spotify, and Duolingo. This article was generated with the support of AI and reviewed by an editor. For more information see our T&C.
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Google adds Gemini to Chrome browser after avoiding antitrust breakup
(Reuters) -Google will integrate Gemini into its Chrome browser for users in the U.S. starting Thursday, just weeks after a federal judge spared the company from a forced breakup in an antitrust case. Alphabet-owned Google won't have to sell the browser, a judge in Washington said earlier this month, handing a rare win to Big Tech in its battle with U.S. antitrust enforcers, but ordered it to share data with rivals to open up competition in online search. The Gemini AI models add-on to Chrome will be available to Mac and Windows desktop users in the U.S. with their language set to English, Google said in a blog post on Thursday. Starting soon, Apple's iOS Chrome app will also have Gemini built into it. Gemini in Chrome will roll out to businesses in the coming weeks via Google Workspace and also on mobile phones in the U.S. The tech giant also built a deeper integration between Gemini in Chrome and other Google apps, such as Calendar, YouTube and Maps. Google will add agentic capabilities that can perform multi-step tasks to Gemini in Chrome in the coming months. It will also find previously visited webpages and enable summarization of content from multiple websites, among other upgrades. The integration is also a push to compete against other companies providing agentic browsers, like Perplexity, which in August made a $34.5 billion unsolicited all-cash offer for Chrome. Its AI-powered browser, Comet, can perform certain tasks on a user's behalf. The ruling by Judge Amit Mehta earlier in September allows Google to retain control of Chrome and Android mobile operating system, while barring certain exclusive contracts with device makers and browser developers. Google can continue making payments to partners such as Apple to feature its search engine, a practice central to its dominance in online search. Apple has approached Google to use Gemini AI to revamp the Siri voice assistant, Bloomberg News had reported in August. (Reporting by Juby Babu in Mexico City; Editing by Alan Barona)
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Gemini comes to Chrome browser: The new AI features explained
Gemini in Chrome enhances security, suggests content, and simplifies complex browsing activities Google Chrome has always been more than a browser. Since its launch in 2008, it has shaped how billions of people interact with the internet, offering speed, simplicity, and security. But in 2025, Chrome is stepping into a new role altogether. With Gemini, Google's most advanced AI model, baked directly into the browser, Chrome is transforming from a passive window to the web into an intelligent, proactive companion. This is not just an incremental update. It's a complete reimagining of what a browser can do. From summarizing the flood of online information to shielding users from scams and even acting as a personal assistant, Gemini promises to change the way we experience the internet. Here's a detailed look at what's new, how these features work, and why they matter. Also read: World programming championship: How ChatGPT, Gemini and AI bots performed The headline feature is the direct integration of Gemini into Chrome. Unlike older versions of Chrome where AI felt like an add-on, Gemini is woven deeply into the browsing experience. The most obvious benefit is smarter information handling. Take the classic example of planning a holiday. Normally, you'd open a dozen tabs - hotels, flights, attractions, local guides - and bounce between them. Gemini can scan across these tabs and present you with a single summary or even a suggested itinerary. The idea is simple: instead of the user doing the heavy lifting, the browser now takes on the cognitive load. Google calls this next step "agentic browsing"and it's exactly what it sounds like. Gemini is no longer just an assistant answering questions; it's an agent that can act on your behalf. Booking a doctor's appointment? Ordering groceries for the week? Registering for a class online? Instead of you clicking through menus and filling out forms, Gemini can handle the task once you tell it what you want done. For everyday users, this could mean shaving minutes off routine tasks. For businesses, it could mean employees spending less time on repetitive online actions and more time on meaningful work. Chrome's omnibox, the address bar at the top, has always been a defining feature. It blurred the line between search and navigation. Now, it's evolving again. With Gemini, the omnibox becomes conversational. Instead of typing "best laptops 2025 reviews" and sifting through links, you could type "Which 2025 laptops under ₹70,000 are best for video editing?" Gemini can return not just links, but contextual answers, summaries, and even follow-up suggestions. Also read: Google search app for Windows PC coming soon: How will it work? Even better, it adapts to the page you're already on. Reading a research paper? The omnibox can suggest questions about methodology or summarize results. Shopping for a gadget? It can highlight pros, cons, and alternatives. One of Chrome's quirks and frustrations has always been tab overload. With dozens of open tabs, it's easy to lose track of what's where. Gemini turns this chaos into clarity by summarizing information across multiple tabs and distilling it into something actionable. The AI also works with your browsing history. Can't remember the name of the Thai restaurant you saw last week? Just ask Gemini. Instead of manually scrolling through your history, it can surface the exact site you're thinking of. This transforms Chrome from a browser into an extended memory for your online life. Browsing isn't just about convenience, it's also about safety. Chrome has always had strong protections, but scams have grown more sophisticated. Fake virus alerts, fraudulent giveaways, and bogus tech-support warnings are now harder to spot. Gemini strengthens Chrome's defenses against online scams by using AI to recognize patterns and flag suspicious activity. It also improves how Chrome handles notifications and permissions. Instead of constantly interrupting you with pop-ups, Chrome can intelligently block spammy or risky requests, while still letting through the ones that matter. In places where phishing scams and fake pop-ups are common, this is likely to become one of the most valuable features once it rolls out. Passwords remain the internet's weakest link. Chrome's built-in password manager is already popular, but Gemini adds a new layer: AI-assisted password changes. If Chrome detects a compromised password, it won't just alert you. On supported sites such as Coursera, Spotify, H&M, and Duolingo, it can now help you reset your password with one click. That means stronger security without the headache of navigating settings or forms. Another advantage of Gemini inside Chrome is how seamlessly it integrates with Google's wider suite of apps. This tighter ecosystem makes Chrome a central hub, not just for browsing the web but for coordinating your digital life. The arrival of Gemini in Chrome isn't just about convenience. It signals a broader shift in how we interact with technology. Browsers used to be static tools, they waited for input and delivered results. Now, they're becoming dynamic assistants capable of taking initiative. For students, this could mean faster research and simpler note-taking. For professionals, it could mean cutting down on repetitive online tasks. For everyday users, it's about safety, summaries, and smarter navigation. Right now, the new Gemini-powered features are rolling out in the U.S. first, in English, for Mac and Windows. Mobile users on Android and iOS will follow, with international availability expected later. Google hasn't given a fixed timeline for international rollout, but considering Chrome's massive footprint, the rollout is likely to happen in phases over the coming months. What we're seeing with Gemini in Chrome is just the beginning. As AI becomes more capable, browsers may soon handle even more complex tasks - like negotiating prices, drafting professional documents based on your research, or even building custom dashboards for projects automatically. Chrome is no longer just a browser. With Gemini, it's becoming your personal AI-powered window to the internet.
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Google revamps Chrome with Gemini AI integration: Check what's new
Agentic browsing lets Gemini handle multi-step tasks like trip planning or shopping. Google is doubling down on artificial intelligence in its popular browser, Chrome. Google Chrome now integrates Gemini AI directly into the browser. The new features include AI-powered page summaries, task automation, and improved integration with Google services such as Calendar, Maps, and YouTube. However, the Gemini will now be available in Chrome for all Mac and Windows users in the United States, without the need for a Google One subscription. However, the chatbot is already available on Android and is set to launch on iOS soon. To access the features, users must simply sign in to their Google account. "We're building Google AI into Chrome across multiple levels so it can better anticipate your needs, help you understand more complex information, and make you more productive when you browse the web, all while keeping you safe," the company stated in a blog post. Among the key editions, the browser gets an upgraded AI Mode, which extends beyond Search to offer AI generated overviews of any webpage. Via the Omnbibox, a traditionally reserved for URLs and search queries, users will be able to ask context aware questions about the content they are viewing. The early looks highlighted tasks such as pulling warranty details while shopping online. Contextual prompts are live now, with Omnibox integration rolling out in the US later this month. The company is also introducing agentic browsing, a feature that lets Gemini handle multi-step tasks directly within Chrome. In one example, the AI pulled a grocery list from an email and added the items to Instacart. While the system can run in the background, it will stop short of executing high-risk actions like purchases or sending emails until the user approves. Beyond browsing, Gemini in Chrome ties into other Google services, including Calendar, Maps, and YouTube, enabling scheduling, location lookups, video summaries, and even recalling previously visited web pages.
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Google announces a major update to Chrome, integrating Gemini AI across various features. The update aims to enhance user experience, improve security, and streamline online tasks.
Google has announced a significant update to its Chrome browser, integrating Gemini AI features for all desktop users in the United States
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. This move marks a pivotal moment in the evolution of web browsers, as AI-powered features become mainstream3
. The update, which is rolling out to Mac and Windows users with English language settings, aims to revolutionize the browsing experience by incorporating AI assistance throughout various aspects of web interaction2
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.Source: The Register
The most visible change is the addition of a Gemini button in the top-right corner of the Chrome window
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. This button allows users to interact with the AI assistant for various tasks, including:Source: engadget
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Google is also bringing its AI Mode search feature directly into Chrome's address bar
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. This allows users to ask complex questions and receive AI-generated responses without leaving their current page. The address bar will also suggest relevant questions based on the content of the page being viewed, providing a more interactive and informative browsing experience1
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.Source: PC Magazine
In the coming months, Google plans to introduce agentic capabilities to Chrome
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. These features will enable Gemini to perform tasks on behalf of users, such as:2
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This development puts Google in direct competition with other AI browser initiatives from companies like OpenAI, Anthropic, and Perplexity
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.The update also includes AI-driven security improvements:
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This extensive integration of AI into Chrome, the world's most popular browser, signifies a major shift in how users interact with the web
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. While some users may welcome these AI-powered features, others might have concerns about privacy, data usage, or the increasing reliance on AI for everyday tasks3
.The Gemini features are currently available to desktop users in the US with English language settings
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. Google plans to expand to more countries and languages in the future. For mobile users, Android devices already have some Gemini functionality, while an iOS update for Chrome is expected soon1
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.As AI continues to permeate web browsing experiences, Google's latest move with Chrome sets a new standard for AI integration in mainstream browsers, potentially reshaping how millions of users interact with the internet
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