Google's Gemini Spark Promises Real Agentic Work, But Privacy Fears Follow

Google's Gemini Spark Promises Real Agentic Work, But Privacy Fears Follow

Google has launched Gemini Spark, an autonomous AI agent that completes tasks for users by tapping the personal data already stored across its apps.

Gemini Spark Launch Details

The company unveiled Spark this week at its annual I/O developer conference, positioning it as a direct answer to OpenClaw and other agentic tools drawing attention from developers.

Sundar Pichai described the product as a personal agent that helps people navigate their digital lives while acting under their direction.

Spark moves Gemini past the chat window.

It runs continuously on dedicated cloud machines, working in the background even after a laptop closes or a phone locks.

The agent syncs with Gmail, Docs, Slides and Calendar. It can sort through a crowded inbox, flag updates from a child's school, or turn raw meeting notes into a clean summary. Spark also reaches outside Google by connecting to services like Instacart and OpenTable, letting users order groceries or book a table through a single request.

Beta access opens next week for Google AI Ultra subscribers, a tier that now costs $100 a month.

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Why Experts See A Shift

Clarence Lee, a tech entrepreneur and visiting lecturer at Cornell's SC Johnson College of Business, said AI is moving from a chat interface toward software that genuinely acts for people. He compared Spark to a personal assistant handling delegated work.

Karan Girotra, a Cornell professor of operations, technology and innovation, said an agent needs intelligence, context and relevant information to perform well.

That requirement is where Google holds an advantage. Spark draws on Gmail and other widely used apps, so it already knows a great deal about each user before the first task.

Personal intelligence, Girotra noted, surfaces through those connections.

Privacy Tradeoffs Of Agentic AI

The same access raises clear risks. Linking an agent to Instacart teaches it food preferences, while inbox access can expose sensitive messages to advertisers or hackers.

Google said Spark will ask permission before high-stakes actions such as spending money or sending emails. Lee still advised a cautious start, suggesting users assign small jobs like drafting emails before handing over a credit card.

Caution looks warranted given Google's recent record. A leaked onboarding screen had earlier warned that Spark "may do things like share your info" without asking, and a proposed class-action suit filed in late 2025 alleges the company enabled Gemini across Gmail accounts without consent.

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