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Tags: AI Studio

Google unveils Antigravity 2.0 with desktop app, CLI and SDK at I/O 2026

Google unveils Antigravity 2.0 with desktop app, CLI and SDK at I/O 2026
At Google I/O 2026, the company rolled out Antigravity 2.0, an upgraded agentic coding platform that adds a desktop application, a command‑line interface and a developer SDK. The new tools let users orchestrate multiple AI agents, schedule background tasks and integrate projects with Google AI Studio, Android and Firebase. Powered by the Gemini 3.5 Flash model, Antigravity 2.0 also introduces native voice commands and a revamped pricing tier that lowers the cost of the top AI Ultra plan. Read more

Meta creates AI version of Mark Zuckerberg for internal employee interactions

Meta creates AI version of Mark Zuckerberg for internal employee interactions
Meta is testing an artificial‑intelligence replica of CEO Mark Zuckerberg to communicate with staff, part of a broader push to embed AI characters across the company. The digital twin, built from the executive’s images and voice, will appear in internal tools that let employees experiment with AI‑driven workflow assistants. The effort follows Meta’s earlier rollout of celebrity‑styled chatbots and a new AI Studio that lets creators build their own virtual personas. While the project aims to boost productivity, it also raises questions about privacy and the future of work at the social‑media giant. Read more

Google launches Gemini 3.1 Flash Live, a more human-like conversational voice model

Google launches Gemini 3.1 Flash Live, a more human-like conversational voice model
Google introduced Gemini 3.1 Flash Live, a real‑time voice model designed to sound more like a person. In Scale AI’s Audio MultiChallenge the model scored 36.1 percent, trailing non‑conversational audio models that exceed 50 percent. The new system embeds SynthID watermarks that are invisible to listeners but detectable for verification. Early partners—including Home Depot and Verizon—reported positive results. Developers can access the model via AI Studio, the Gemini API, and Gemini Enterprise for Customer Experience, with the technology appearing in Gemini Live and Search Live features. Read more

Google Launches Nano Banana 2 AI Image Model for Gemini

Google Launches Nano Banana 2 AI Image Model for Gemini
Google introduced Nano Banana 2, the latest AI image generation model, across its Gemini platform and related services. The new model promises higher consistency for multiple characters, improved object rendering, richer textures and vibrant lighting, and expanded aspect‑ratio and resolution options ranging from small square formats to 4K widescreen. Nano Banana 2 will replace earlier Nano Banana variants in the Gemini app, Google Search, AI Studio, Vertex AI, and Flow, serving the Fast, Thinking and Pro settings. Google showcased example prompts that illustrate the model’s ability to create detailed infographics, artistic scenes, and coordinated group images. Read more

Google Unveils Gemini 3 Flash, Boosting AI Speed and Capability

Google Unveils Gemini 3 Flash, Boosting AI Speed and Capability
Google has launched Gemini 3 Flash, a new generative AI model that promises faster performance and higher accuracy than its predecessors. Available now through the Gemini app, search, Gemini API, Vertex AI, AI Studio, and Antigravity, the model delivers notable gains on academic, reasoning, and coding benchmarks while offering lower token costs. Gemini 3 Flash narrows the gap with the larger Gemini 3 Pro, delivering comparable results on many tests at a fraction of the price, positioning it as a versatile option for developers and users seeking efficient, high‑quality AI outputs. Read more

Google Pulls Gemma AI Model After Senator Accuses It of Fabricating Assault Claims

Google Pulls Gemma AI Model After Senator Accuses It of Fabricating Assault Claims
Google removed its Gemma AI model from the AI Studio platform after Republican Senator Marsha Blackburn alleged the system fabricated false criminal accusations against her. The senator sent a letter to CEO Sundar Pichai claiming defamation, citing the model's affirmative answer to a question about her being accused of rape and its generation of bogus news links. Google clarified that Gemma is intended for developers, not consumer queries, and will remain accessible via API. Blackburn also accused the company of a pattern of bias against conservative figures. Read more

Google withdraws developer‑only Gemma AI model after senator’s defamation claim

Google withdraws developer‑only Gemma AI model after senator’s defamation claim
Google has removed its developer‑focused Gemma AI model from the AI Studio platform after U.S. Senator Marsha Blackburn alleged that the system fabricated a false criminal accusation against her. The incident highlights the challenges of AI hallucinations when models intended for developers are accessed by the public. Google clarified that Gemma was never meant to answer general factual queries and will now be limited to API access for developers only. The episode underscores growing concerns about AI accuracy, defamation risk, and the need for clearer separation between experimental tools and consumer‑facing services. Read more

Google Pulls Gemma Model from AI Studio After Senator’s Complaint

Google Pulls Gemma Model from AI Studio After Senator’s Complaint
Google announced that it is removing the open‑source Gemma AI model from its AI Studio platform following a complaint from Senator Marsha Blackburn. Blackburn claimed the model generated false sexual‑misconduct allegations against her after a hearing on AI‑generated defamation. Google said the decision aims to reduce hallucinations and limit non‑developer tinkering, while still offering Gemma through its API and downloadable files for local use. Read more

Google Removes Developer AI Model Gemma After Senator Accuses It of Fabricating Allegations

Google Removes Developer AI Model Gemma After Senator Accuses It of Fabricating Allegations
Google announced that its Gemma family of AI models has been withdrawn from the AI Studio platform after Republican Senator Marsha Blackburn claimed the model fabricated a serious criminal allegation about her. The company said Gemma is intended for developers, not for answering factual questions by the public, and will remain accessible via API. Google reiterated its commitment to reducing hallucinations in its models while addressing the defamation concerns raised by the senator. Read more

Google Removes Gemma Model from AI Studio After Senator Accuses It of Defamation

Google Removes Gemma Model from AI Studio After Senator Accuses It of Defamation
Google has taken its open‑source Gemma model offline from the AI Studio platform following a complaint from U.S. Senator Marsha Blackburn. The senator claimed the model generated false statements alleging sexual misconduct against her, describing the output as defamatory rather than a harmless hallucination. Google responded that the model was intended for developer use, not for direct public queries, and said it would keep the model available through its API while working to curb erroneous outputs. The episode highlights ongoing political concerns about AI bias and misinformation. Read more

Google Gemini’s Nano Banana Image Tool Outshines ChatGPT in Consistency and Realism

Google Gemini’s Nano Banana Image Tool Outshines ChatGPT in Consistency and Realism
Google has expanded its Gemini AI platform with the Nano Banana image editor, a tool that offers faster generation, stronger character consistency, and more realistic image‑to‑image blending than OpenAI’s ChatGPT image feature. Available through the Gemini app, AI Studio, and a dedicated website, Nano Banana delivers results in seconds and keeps visual details consistent across edits, positioning it as a compelling alternative for users seeking quick, realistic AI‑generated images. Read more