
The antitrust case has just concluded, and Google immediately injects "AI soul" Gemini into the Chrome browser

Google announced the integration of its artificial intelligence tool Gemini into the Chrome browser, making it available to users in the United States. This move comes shortly after the conclusion of an antitrust lawsuit. The Gemini feature allows users to generate concise summaries of articles and web pages directly within the browser, helping them quickly grasp the core content. In the coming weeks, enterprise users will also be able to use this feature through Google Workspace, along with the addition of intelligent agent capabilities
According to Zhitong Finance APP, Google (GOOGL.US) recently announced the integration of its artificial intelligence (AI) tool Gemini into the Chrome browser, making it available to users in the United States. Just two weeks ago, an antitrust lawsuit that could have affected the ownership of the browser was resolved.
On Thursday, Google officially pushed the Gemini feature update for the Chrome browser to U.S. users. Currently, this feature is only available to users who meet the following conditions: logging into the Chrome browser with a U.S. English account, using a Mac or Windows device, and having upgraded Chrome to the latest version.
With Gemini, users can directly generate concise summaries for articles, web pages, or discussion threads within the browser, helping them quickly grasp the core content.
In addition to Chrome, Google is also integrating Gemini into other services such as Google Docs, YouTube, and Calendar, with the feature set to launch on Android and iOS mobile systems soon.
Mike Torres, Vice President of Chrome, stated in a blog post that in the coming weeks, enterprise users will be able to use the Gemini feature in the Chrome browser through Google Workspace, which will have enterprise-level data security and control capabilities.
Torres also revealed, "In the coming months, we will add intelligent agent features to Gemini in the Chrome browser."
Earlier this month, in a highly publicized antitrust lawsuit, a federal court ruled that Google is not required to sell its flagship product, the Chrome web browser. Judge Amit Mehta ordered that Google must open more data to competitors to promote competition in the online search field; at the same time, it was clarified that Google cannot sign exclusive agreements for search services but can still pay to have its search engine included on relevant platforms.
Additionally, reports indicate that earlier this week, Google Gemini surpassed OpenAI's ChatGPT over the weekend to become the most downloaded free app in the Apple (AAPL.US) App Store
