Gemini adds chat import tools

Plus: Anthropic blocks US government ban

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Hello, Prohuman

Today, we will talk about these stories:

  • Google wants your AI history

  • Court pauses Trump AI ban

  • AI text banned from Wikipedia articles

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Google removes the friction of switching AI

Image Credits: Google Blog

Google is making it easy to carry your AI past with you.

Gemini now lets users import memories, preferences, and full chat history from other AI apps using a copy-paste prompt or a ZIP upload. The feature is rolling out now and ties into Google’s broader “Personal Intelligence” system across Gmail, Photos, and Search.

This is less about convenience and more about lock-in pressure across the whole category, because switching tools has been one of the few things keeping users flexible. If your assistant knows your history, your habits, and even past trip planning threads, moving away starts to feel like work.

Other AI apps will have to match this or risk losing users who don’t want to rebuild context from scratch. Late at night, staring at a screen full of old chats, that friction matters more than model quality.

If every AI knows you this well, what actually makes you switch?

Anthropic keeps US government access for now

A judge just stopped the US from cutting off Anthropic.

A federal court issued a preliminary injunction blocking a Trump administration plan to ban government use of Anthropic’s AI tools. The order pauses the move for now, with a seven-day window for appeal as the case continues in San Francisco.

This looks like a standard procurement fight on the surface, but the stakes are much bigger because government contracts can anchor billions in long-term revenue. Anthropic is signaling it will fight hard to stay inside federal systems where AI adoption is still early and up for grabs.

Other AI companies will watch this closely since a precedent here could shape who gets excluded or approved across agencies. Early morning filings like this tend to drag on, and that uncertainty can freeze decisions inside government teams.

If governments start picking winners in AI, how much does the market actually decide?

Wikipedia restricts AI from writing articles

Image Credits: Wikipedia

Wikipedia just told editors to stop using AI to write articles.

The site now prohibits using LLMs to generate or rewrite article content, following a community vote that passed 40 to 2. Editors can still use AI for light copyedits, as long as it doesn’t add new information.

This is a practical move to protect sourcing and trust, since AI text can drift beyond what citations actually support even when it looks clean. Wikipedia runs on volunteer judgment, and letting AI write freely would make verification much harder at scale.

Other knowledge platforms will likely tighten rules as well, especially ones that depend on human credibility rather than speed. You can picture someone editing late at night with a dozen tabs open, trying to check if a sentence actually came from a real source.

If AI can’t be trusted to write the record, where does it still fit?

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