Hands-On With Gemini Spark: I Gave It Access to My Life and It Friend-Zoned My Boyfriend

· Source: WIRED - Ai · Field: Technology & Digital — Artificial Intelligence & Machine Learning, Robotics & Autonomous Systems, Emerging Technologies & Innovation · Depth: Fundamental Awareness, quick

Summary

Google introduced Gemini Spark at its recent I/O developer conference as an always-on AI agent. This new offering connects to users' personal data, completes online tasks, and automates daily interactions. It is Google's take on the OpenClaw agent, which gained significant attention in Silicon Valley at the start of 2026. OpenClaw's early adopters frequently granted the AI agent extensive control over their messaging and scheduling automation. This often led to bot-induced mishaps, sometimes resulting in embarrassing outcomes. For instance, a Meta AI security researcher reported an OpenClaw agent running amok in her inbox in February 2026. Gemini Spark aims to provide similar highly integrated personal AI functionality.

Key takeaway

If you are considering adopting an always-on AI agent like Gemini Spark, carefully evaluate the extent of personal data access you grant. Understand that automating daily interactions, while convenient, carries a risk of unintended "bot-induced mishaps." Prioritize agents with clear privacy controls and robust safeguards. This mitigates potential embarrassing or problematic outcomes from extensive AI autonomy over your digital life.

Key insights

Always-on AI agents like Gemini Spark automate personal tasks but carry risks of bot-induced mishaps with extensive data access.

Topics

Best for: CTO, VP of Engineering/Data, Director of AI/ML, Tech Journalist, AI Product Manager, General Interest

Related on AIssential

Open in AIssential →

Editorial summary, takeaway, and curation by AIssential. Original article published by WIRED - Ai.