Google Chrome takes up 4GB of storage on your computer for AI, if you have space
AI-summarised brief · reviewed before publication
Google Chrome's recent update installed 4GB of local AI models, Gemini Nano, on users' computers without warning, depending on available storage and enabled features like "Help me write" and scam detection. The update occurred in the background, with Chrome managing disk space to avoid low storage issues. The model is automatically deleted if free disk space drops below a certain threshold.
💡 Why It Matters
- · By embedding models like Gemini Nano directly inside the browser, Chrome is moving toward on-device AI by default, reducing reliance on the cloud.
- · However, Chrome's silent installation of AI models raises concerns about user transparency and control over their device's storage.
- · Disk space, RAM, and background processing are being consumed for features many users may never use.