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[ARTICLE · art-34093] src=dev.to ↗ pub= topic=artificial-intelligence verified=true sentiment=↓ negative

Google is Secretly Trying to Run a 4GB AI Model Without You Knowing it! 😱

Google is downloading its 4GB Gemini Nano AI model onto users' computers via Chrome without clear notification. The lightweight model powers on-device features like scam detection but consumes significant storage and RAM, raising privacy and consent concerns. Users can check for the model in Chrome's local data folders and disable or remove it through settings and flags.

read1 min views1 publishedJun 19, 2026

I recently discovered something interesting.

If you're using Google Chrome, there is a chance that Chrome has downloaded a 4GB AI model called Gemini Nano directly onto your computer without a clear notification. The file is usually stored as weights.bin inside Chrome's local data folders. What is Gemini Nano?

Gemini Nano is Google's lightweight AI model designed to run directly on your device instead of sending everything to cloud servers. It powers features such as:

The goal is faster responses and better privacy because some processing happens locally.

👍 Benefits

Powers s

ecurity features like scam detection locally

👎 Downsides

Consumes around 4GB of storage

Can increase RAM usage during AI tasks

May affect laptops with lower memory (8GB–12GB RAM)

Uses bandwidth for down the model

Many

users were unaware it had been downloaded

How to Check if You Have It (Windows)

Open File Explorer and check:

C:\Users\YOUR_USERNAME\AppData\Local\Google\Chrome\User Data\

Look for a folder named:

OptGuideOnDeviceModel

If you see a large weights.bin file (~4GB), that's Gemini Nano. ** How to Remove It Completely**

Step 1: Open Chrome

Go to:

chrome://settings/system

Disable:

On-device AI

Step 2: Open

chrome://flags

Search and disable:

Gemini Nano

Prompt API

Optimization Guide On Device Model

Other Gemini-related experimental flags

Step 3: Close Chrome completely.

Step 4: Delete the folder: OptGuideOnDeviceModel

Step 5 (Optional): Enterprise/advanced users can block future downloads through Chrome policies. Google has also added controls to disable and remove the model in newer Chrome versions.

My Take

Running AI locally is the future.

But if an AI model takes 4GB of storage and potentially several more GB of RAM while running, users should be informed before it lands on their devices.

Privacy-friendly AI is great.

Silent 4GB downloads? That's where the debate starts.

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