Google may be preparing to unveil a major new AI-powered assistant feature called Gemini Spark, and an apparent onboarding screen leak ahead of the company’s upcoming event has now revealed key details about what the feature could do.

The leaked screen describes Gemini Spark as an “everyday AI agent” designed to help users with inbox management, online tasks, connected apps, chats, websites and more. The feature is currently labeled as Beta, suggesting Google may still be testing capabilities before a broader rollout.

Gemini Spark Leak Reveals Google’s AI Agent Ambitions

According to the leaked onboarding page, Gemini Spark is designed to “do more as your everyday AI agent, ready 24/7 to help with your inbox, online tasks, and more.”

The wording strongly suggests Google is pushing Gemini beyond a chatbot experience and toward a fully integrated AI assistant capable of taking actions on behalf of users.

The onboarding page also highlights how Gemini Spark may improve over time by learning from a wide range of connected data sources and user interactions.

Key Details Revealed in the Leak

The leaked onboarding screen includes three major sections explaining how Gemini Spark works:

1. How Gemini Spark Works for You

The leak states that the more users interact with Gemini Spark, the better it understands their needs and goals.

Google says the feature may use information from:

  • Connected Apps
  • Skills
  • Chats
  • Tasks
  • Websites users are logged into
  • Personal Intelligence
  • Location data
  • Additional linked services

The screen also mentions that Gemini may share necessary information with third parties when required for task completion.

Notably, the onboarding message explicitly warns users that Gemini Spark could access sensitive information including:

  • Names
  • Contact information
  • Files
  • Preferences
  • Other personal data users might consider sensitive

This points toward a significantly deeper integration model than current AI chat experiences.

Gemini Spark Appears Focused on Autonomous Actions

One of the biggest takeaways from the leak is Gemini Spark’s apparent focus on autonomous or semi-autonomous task execution.

The onboarding page states that Gemini Spark may perform actions like online purchases, while also noting that users should supervise the system carefully.

Google’s warning reads:

“While it is designed to ask for your permission before taking sensitive actions, it may do things like share your info or make purchases without asking.”

That language suggests Gemini Spark could function similarly to emerging AI agent systems being developed across the tech industry.

AI agents are increasingly being designed to:

  • Navigate websites
  • Fill forms
  • Handle bookings
  • Respond to emails
  • Manage schedules
  • Execute multi-step online tasks

If accurate, Gemini Spark could become Google’s most ambitious consumer AI assistant yet.

Google Emphasizes Privacy Controls and User Choices

The leaked onboarding screen also dedicates a full section to privacy controls and data management.

Google says Gemini Spark may save:

  • Remote browser data
  • Login details
  • Remote code execution data

The screen notes that users can clear saved data and disable Connected Apps or other Personal Intelligence features through Settings.

Users may also reportedly manage and delete activity through Gemini Apps Activity controls.

The inclusion of these disclosures suggests Google is preparing for increased scrutiny around AI privacy, automation and user consent.

Gemini Spark Could Be Part of Google’s Bigger AI Push

The timing of the leak is especially notable because it surfaced shortly before a major Google event where the company is expected to announce new Gemini AI features, Android updates and deeper AI integrations across products.

Gemini Spark appears aligned with Google’s broader strategy of transforming Gemini into:

  • A universal AI assistant
  • A proactive productivity tool
  • A cross-platform AI agent
  • A replacement for traditional digital assistants

The references to Connected Apps and logged-in websites hint at deeper integration with Google Workspace, Chrome, Android and potentially third-party services.

Experimental Label Suggests Limited Early Rollout

The onboarding page clearly labels Gemini Spark as “experimental.”

Google also advises users not to rely on the feature for:

  • Medical advice
  • Legal advice
  • Financial advice
  • Other professional services

This caution suggests Gemini Spark may initially launch as an opt-in feature for select users, likely with limited access during early testing.

The leak also indicates that Google is actively positioning Gemini Spark as a next-generation AI experience rather than a standard chatbot.

What Gemini Spark Could Mean for the Future of AI Assistants

If Gemini Spark launches with the capabilities hinted at in the leak, it could represent one of Google’s most important AI announcements yet.

Instead of simply answering prompts, Gemini Spark appears designed to:

  • Understand user intent over time
  • Access connected platforms and apps
  • Take real-world actions online
  • Automate repetitive workflows
  • Operate continuously as a personalized AI agent

That would place Google directly into the rapidly growing AI agent race currently reshaping the consumer technology industry.

For now, Google has not officially announced Gemini Spark publicly, but the leaked onboarding page offers an early look at what could become a major centerpiece of the company’s AI ecosystem.

With Google’s event approaching, more details about Gemini Spark and its rollout could emerge very soon.

Interested in reading more about Google Gemini news. Read our full Google Gemini coverage by clicking here.

Please follow us on our Facebook page and X account for all latest and breaking Google,  Android and Nokia related news.

Add NPowerUser (https://nokiapoweruser.com) as a preferred source on Google News
Add NPowerUser as a preferred source on Google News