Google Sued Over Its Gemini AI for Allegedly Spying on Private Communications

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Millions of Users Potentially Affected

The proposed class action seeks certification on behalf of “millions” of Google account holders across the United States. Plaintiffs are asking for a broad injunction to prevent Google from continuing to collect, use, or store private communications without consent, alongside monetary damages for the alleged privacy violations.

If certified, the case could become one of the most consequential digital privacy lawsuits in years—potentially forcing the world’s largest tech company to rethink how it integrates artificial intelligence into users’ daily interactions.

Google Silent Amid Mounting Legal Fire

As of Wednesday, Google has not commented on the lawsuit. The plaintiffs are represented by Tina Wolfson, Robert Ahdoot, Theodore W. Maya, Alyssa D. Brown, and Bradley K. King of Ahdoot & Wolfson PC. Counsel for Google has not yet been disclosed.

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The complaint echoes a growing unease over how Big Tech deploys AI—painting Gemini not as a helpful assistant, but as a silent observer lurking behind every sent message and scheduled meeting. Whether this digital giant can defend its secret AI switch in court remains to be seen—but the stakes, like the data it’s accused of collecting, are enormous.