Google has switched on Gemini’s email summaries in Gmail for all account types, which means the AI can now condense long conversation threads for paid, corporate, and personal users across Android, iOS, and the web. The feature, called ”AI Overviews conversation summaries,” is available worldwide in a limited set of languages: English, French, German, Italian, Japanese, Korean, Portuguese, and Spanish.

That convenience comes with a trade-off: if you turn it off to keep Gemini out of your inbox, you also shut off a wider set of Google Workspace smart features. Google has expanded the feature from Google AI subscribers to free users, after an earlier rollout limited to the US.

How Gemini summarizes Gmail threads

Gemini reads the content of a specific email chain and produces a short summary so users can get the gist without scrolling through every reply. That’s useful for sprawling workplace threads, but it also means Google is pushing its assistant deeper into core productivity tools, the same playbook Microsoft is following with Copilot across Office apps.

  • Available on paid, corporate, and personal accounts
  • Works on Android, iOS, and the web
  • Supports English, French, German, Italian, Japanese, Korean, Portuguese, and Spanish

How to stop Gemini reading your email

Google does let users switch it off, but not selectively. To block Gemini from email analysis, you have to go through Gmail settings, open the General tab, find the Google Workspace smart features section, and disable all smart features in Workspace settings. That is a blunt instrument, and it affects more than Gmail.

Once disabled, the same switch also removes Gemini access from other Workspace apps, including Google Drive and Google Tasks. That means no AI help in those services either, along with features such as voice commands for reminders and other integrated tools. For privacy-minded users, the choice is clear; for everyone else, Google has made the default path the most useful one, which is exactly how these products are usually won.

Why Google is pushing Gemini across Gmail

This rollout fits a familiar pattern: start with a premium-only feature, broaden it to free users, then normalize it across the whole ecosystem. The upside for Google is obvious – more people get used to Gemini doing the tedious reading for them. The unanswered question is whether enough users will accept the privacy cost, or whether the settings menu becomes the real battleground.

Source: Ixbt

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