Physical Address
304 North Cardinal St.
Dorchester Center, MA 02124
Physical Address
304 North Cardinal St.
Dorchester Center, MA 02124

Google Chrome could be taking up some extra storage space on your device. Based on reports, the browser has been automatically downloading a 4GB AI model onto some users’ hard drives without their permission. This isn’t the first time Google has discreetly interfered with users’ devicesand privacy advocates say the practice may violate data laws.
The mysterious file in question is Gemini Nano, an AI model that runs on devicessuch as smartphones and laptops rather than in the cloud. According to Alexander Hanff, a Swedish computer scientist and lawyer known as That Privacy Guy, it’s been installed on some Chrome browsers without permission. You won’t know when it’s been downloaded onto your device, either.
Hanff said Gemini Nano will only be installed if the device meets the hardware requirements. It’s still unknown how many people have gotten the install.
Gemini Nano performs tasks such as detecting scam phone calls, helping you write text messages, summarizing recordings and analyzing Pixel phone screenshots. It’s not to be confused with the AI Fashion pill in the address bar. If you use AI Mode, your queries are routed to Google Gemini servers, not to Gemini Nano.
A Google spokesperson told CNET that Gemini Nano will automatically uninstall if the device doesn’t have enough resources, such as processing power, memory, storage space or network bandwidth.
“In February, we began rolling out the ability for users to easily turn off and remove the model directly in Chrome settings,” the spokesperson said. “Once disabled, the model will no longer download or update.”
Google gives more information about on-device generative AI models in Chrome on this web page.
If you want to remove the 4GB AI model from your device, first check whether it’s installed.
Hanff said Chrome users will not know they have Gemini Nano unless they search for it, because “Chrome did not ask” and “Chrome does not surface it.”
The easiest way to remove Gemini Nano from your device is to uninstall Chrome.
If you’re running a Windows device, there are a few ways to check whether Gemini Nano is installed.
Watch this: Google I/O 2026: New Gemini, Smart Glasses and a Whole New Laptop OS. Here’s What to Expect
Hanff said the push might be intended to help Google cut costs by moving AI work off its own servers and onto your computer.
“Running inference on users’ own hardware allows them to push ‘AI features’ without the compute costs,” Hanff told CNET.
AI inference is the process by which the model actually does the things you prompt it to, as opposed to the training of it, which generally happens in a data center. If it’s happening on your computer instead of in the cloud, that could have an impact on things like your computer’s speed or battery life, in addition to storage space the model’s taking up on your hard drive.
But Hanff suggested there could be legal ramifications, at least in Europe. He suggested that the Gemini Nano install could constitute a breach of the European Union’s General Data Protection Regulation’s principles of lawfulness, fairness and transparency. Hanff said that, considering the potential environmental impacts, Google should have announced it under the Corporate Sustainability Reporting Directive.
“Google has given us every reason not to trust them with a history spanning two decades of global privacy violations at massive scale,” Hanff told CNET. “So, I suspect they figured asking permission (what the law requires) would hinder their ability to push this model and, of course, whatever comes after it.”