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Gemini Spark is now rolling out and it hopes you will trust an AI more than apps

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Gemini Spark in action
Digital Trends

For years, AI assistants have mostly lived in chat windows. You ask a question, they answer it, and the interaction ends there. Google appears ready to push that idea much further with Gemini Spark, a new AI agent that is now rolling out to all Google AI Ultra subscribers in the U.S. So, instead of opening multiple apps and manually managing tasks, you hand the job to Gemini Spark and let it work in the background.

According to Google, Gemini Spark can operate autonomously across your digital ecosystem, handling tasks even when your phone or laptop is turned off. Users can either watch it work in real time or let it run quietly in the background. Importantly, Google says the system remains under user control and is designed to seek approval before taking significant actions.

Google wants AI to become the middleman

The arrival of Gemini Spark highlights a broader shift happening across the AI industry. Companies are no longer satisfied with building chatbots that answer questions. The next frontier is AI agents that can actually do things on your behalf. Think of the difference between asking an assistant for restaurant recommendations and having it compare options, make a reservation, add it to your calendar, and remind you when it’s time to leave. That’s the vision many AI companies are chasing.

Google’s approach suggests it wants Gemini to become the layer between users and the apps they rely on every day. Rather than jumping between services, the AI becomes the coordinator that connects them all.

The biggest challenge isn’t capability

The technology itself may not be the hardest sell; trust will be. Most people are comfortable letting AI summarize an email or answer a question. Giving it permission to act independently is a very different proposition. Even with approval checkpoints in place, many users will likely want proof that an AI agent can reliably make decisions without creating new problems.

That’s why Gemini Spark feels like more than just another feature update. It’s an early glimpse at a future where AI isn’t simply responding to commands but actively managing parts of your digital life. Whether people are ready for that level of automation remains an open question. But Google is clearly betting that the next step in AI is getting users comfortable enough to let AI take action on their behalf.

Shimul Sood
Shimul is a contributor at Digital Trends, with over five years of experience in the tech space.
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