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Gemini in Chrome: Google Can Now Track Your Phone

Although these AI browser tools are handy, relying on them can expose your privacy and personal data to third-party companies.

Gemini in Chrome: Google Can Now Track Your Phone

Is the Gemini browser collecting user data?

A new warning for 2 billion Chrome users, Google has announced that its browser will start collecting “sensitive data” on smartphones. “Starting today, we’re rolling out Gemini in Chrome,” Google said, which will be the “biggest upgrade to Chrome in its history.” The data that can be collected includes the device ID, username, location, search history, and browsing history. 

Agentic AI and browsers

Surfshark investigated the user privacy of AI browsers after Google’s announcement and found that if you use Chrome with Gemini on your smartphone, Google can collect 24 types of data. According to Surfshark, this is bigger than any other agentic AI browsers that have been analyzed. 

For instance, Microsoft’s Edge browser, which has Copilot, only collects half the data compared to Chrome and Gemini. Even Brave, Opera, and Perplexity collect less data. With the Gemini-in-Chrome extension, however, users should be more careful. 

Now that AI is everywhere, a lot of browsers like Firefox, Chrome, and Edge allow users to integrate agentic AI extensions. Although these tools are handy, relying on them can expose your privacy and personal data to third-party companies.

There have been incidents recently where data harvesting resulted from browser extensions, even those downloaded from official stores. 

The new data collection warning comes at the same time as the Gemini upgrade this month, called “Nano Banana.” This new update will also feed on user data. 

According to Android Authority, “Google may be working on bringing Nano Banana, Gemini’s popular image editing tool, to Google Photos. We’ve uncovered a GIF for a new ‘Create’ feature in the Google Photos app, suggesting it’ll use Nano Banana inside the app. It’s unclear when the feature will roll out.”

AI browser concerns

Experts have warned that every photo you upload has a biometric fingerprint which consists of your micro-expressions, unique facial geometry, body proportions, and micro-expressions. The biometric data included device fingerprinting, behavioural biometrics, social network mapping, and GPS coordinates.

Besides this, Apple’s Safari now has anti-fingerprinting technology as the default browsing for iOS 26. However, users should only use their own browser for it to work. For instance, if you use Chrome on an Apple device, it won’t work. Another reason why Apply is advising users to use the Safari browser and not Chrome. 

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