Google announced Gemini Spark at I/O 2026 today, and it might be the most ambitious thing the company has put on stage.
Billed as “your personal AI agent,” Spark is a cloud-based AI that runs continuously. According to Google, Spark runs in the Cloud, so you don’t need a Mac Mini or a dedicated home server. Plus, it’s designed to handle the kind of tasks that pile up in your inbox and to-do list while you’re busy doing everything else.
Powered by Gemini 3.5 and built with Google’s Antigravity coding IDE baked in, Spark connects to Google’s own products and integrates with more than 30 third-party tools via MCP, including Adobe, Asana, Dropbox, Lyft, OpenTable, Uber, Zillow, and Zocdoc. Need to send your boss a status update? Spark digs through your inbox and Docs to pull together everything relevant. Running a small business? You can set it to monitor incoming customer inquiries and flag the urgent ones.
Google said Spark will land inside Gmail and Chat soon and begin rolling out to AI Ultra subscribers in the U.S. next week.
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Gemini Spark has safeguards in place
The question everyone has about an autonomous AI agent is obvious: what stops it from doing something you didn’t want? Google’s answer was the Agent Payments Protocol (AP2), a framework that imposes hard limits on what Spark can spend, which merchants it can interact with, and what it can actually purchase. For now, users approve any transactions before they go through.
Josh Woodward, VP of Google Labs, described the philosophy at a media briefing ahead of the event: “On the team, we think a lot of it as if you’re giving a teenager their first debit card. There are sort of limits and constraints around it, and that’s how we’ll be designing Spark as we go through the year.”
As Google sees it, Spark will gradually gain autonomy over time. For now, though, AP2 will include a permanent digital paper trail for returns and disputes and head to Google Shopping later this year.
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