News

Google Chrome’s Alleged 4GB AI Download Sparks Privacy Concerns

Chrome’s Most Recent Release, Version 147, now Includes an AI Mode Pill in the Omnibox, which Routes Queries to Cloud-based AI Servers

Written By : Soham Halder
Reviewed By : Sankha Ghosh

Chrome faces scrutiny after reports of automatic AI model installation, highlighting privacy and transparency concerns. The group of analysts argues that this kind of silent modification of a user's environment violates both user expectations and, in their view, European privacy law.

What does the 4GB AI Model Installation Report Claim?

Google Chrome has started automatically downloading and installing an on-device AI model file, weights.bin, to power Gemini Nano. The 4GB model is being installed on users’ devices without consent, notice, or an opt-out toggle and deleting the file causes Chrome to re-download the model without telling you.

According to Alexander Hanff from The Privacy Guy, this behavior mirrors a pattern previously seen with Anthropic’s Claude Desktop.

Privacy and Storage Concerns Raised by Users

The weights.bin file is stored in the OptGuideOnDeviceModel directory in your Chrome user profile. It weighs a hefty 4GB and is installed on devices that meet certain system requirements, without obtaining user consent or offering an option to disable it in the settings. To prevent it from being redownloaded after deletion, users should disable it via chrome://flags or enterprise policy tools.

In Hanff’s testing, Chrome took just 14 minutes to create the OptGuideOnDeviceModel directory and download the model, all while giving users no indication that it was downloading such a large file. The researcher said that Google's activity involved many dark patterns, similar to those seen in the Claude desktop app, which he had written about before. The dark patterns listed involve:

  • Forced bundling across trust boundaries

  • Invisible default with no opt-in

  • Harder to remove than install

  • Pre-staging capability user did not request

  • Generic/obfuscated naming: OptGuideOnDeviceModel vs GeminiNanoLLM

  • Registration without user configuration

  • Documentation gap for normal users

  • Automatic re-install after deletion

  • Retroactive survival of future consent

  • Shipped via stable release channel

Also Read: Google Sharpens AI Pricing Strategy With New Ultra Lite Plan for Gemini

Closing Note 

A key focus of Hanff's post is the environmental cost of silently distributing a 4GB AI model, highlighting the perils of distributing such a file on a global scale. If deployed across hundreds of millions or billions of devices, he estimated that the total emissions impact of simply distributing the file (not even using it) could reach tens of thousands of tons of CO2 equivalent. This is similar to the annual output of tens of thousands of cars. 

The researcher also noted that deploying this model on devices has a significant climate impact, generating 640,000 tonnes of CO2e. For users with data caps or relying on mobile data, the download could use up all the data and leave them scratching their heads about what’s going on.

Galaxy A37 Review: Safe Upgrades, Weak Value Proposition

UAE Takes Lead as Global Money Hub Over US, Claims Binance Founder CZ

007 First Light Brings a 20-Hour Story-Focused James Bond Experience

Apple Shifts Strategy, iOS 27 May Introduce Third-Party AI Models

Google Sharpens AI Pricing Strategy With New Ultra Lite Plan for Gemini