The framing of Gemini as a guest who 'leaves the room' is doing a lot of heavy lifting. The room is Google's server. The guest works for Google. At best you're trusting a company whose entire business model is knowing everything about you to voluntarily not look.
The guest is already smoking a cigarette with its feet up when you enter the room. It will try to auto-create email replies with relatively dark patterns, making your own response take extra effort. F U google.
"Dear Grandma, Sorry to hear about your friend. It might cheer you up knowing that YouTube TV has over 450 channels and is currently offering two months free to be subscribers!"
> whether or not Gemini really does forget what it has seen as easily as claimed
Whoever is writing this seems to have absolutely no clue how AI works.
Given that Google is clear about the fact that they don't train on your emails, the worst that could be happening here is that... within the scope of your account they maintain an extra index or two, or... additional synthesized data, in addition to the many indexes that they already maintain over your email.
While composing a reply to recipient B leaking some details that it "learned" when reading a mail from sender A, which you did not want to share with B. I have no idea how they organize sessions, indexes and whatever they use. But if no "side-channels" existed, I would be extremely surprised.
Of course reading generated text remains the sole responsibility of the user before clicking "Send". We all know that reading drafts can happen more or less carefully, especially when being in a hurry.
> Whoever is writing this seems to have absolutely no clue how AI works.
The question isn’t really about how AI works. It’s about how Google (the company) works. Do their actions match their stated intentions? Which is really a question of trust. Are they incentivised to lie? Yes. Are they likely to survive a disclosure scandal? Facebook’s experience inclines me to believe yes.
My domain hosted at google workspace mailing lists are increasingly marked as spam, because google uses central Google identities sending them and every workspace @mydomain is tainted by whatever spam other hosted workspaces acquire. They haven't worked out how to dkim/spf them into buckets which other big mail players won't cast as bad"
The value proposition behind google hosted domains is falling.
The framing of Gemini as a guest who 'leaves the room' is doing a lot of heavy lifting. The room is Google's server. The guest works for Google. At best you're trusting a company whose entire business model is knowing everything about you to voluntarily not look.
The guest is already smoking a cigarette with its feet up when you enter the room. It will try to auto-create email replies with relatively dark patterns, making your own response take extra effort. F U google.
"Dear Grandma, Sorry to hear about your friend. It might cheer you up knowing that YouTube TV has over 450 channels and is currently offering two months free to be subscribers!"
> whether or not Gemini really does forget what it has seen as easily as claimed
Whoever is writing this seems to have absolutely no clue how AI works.
Given that Google is clear about the fact that they don't train on your emails, the worst that could be happening here is that... within the scope of your account they maintain an extra index or two, or... additional synthesized data, in addition to the many indexes that they already maintain over your email.
While composing a reply to recipient B leaking some details that it "learned" when reading a mail from sender A, which you did not want to share with B. I have no idea how they organize sessions, indexes and whatever they use. But if no "side-channels" existed, I would be extremely surprised.
Of course reading generated text remains the sole responsibility of the user before clicking "Send". We all know that reading drafts can happen more or less carefully, especially when being in a hurry.
> Whoever is writing this seems to have absolutely no clue how AI works.
The question isn’t really about how AI works. It’s about how Google (the company) works. Do their actions match their stated intentions? Which is really a question of trust. Are they incentivised to lie? Yes. Are they likely to survive a disclosure scandal? Facebook’s experience inclines me to believe yes.
Google has been "clear" on many things in the past that were outright lies.
My domain hosted at google workspace mailing lists are increasingly marked as spam, because google uses central Google identities sending them and every workspace @mydomain is tainted by whatever spam other hosted workspaces acquire. They haven't worked out how to dkim/spf them into buckets which other big mail players won't cast as bad"
The value proposition behind google hosted domains is falling.
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