Google develops Remy AI agent for Gemini
According to Business Insider, Google is developing an AI agent codenamed "Remy" that runs inside a staff-only version of the Gemini app. An internal document described Remy as a "24/7 personal agent" that can take actions on a user's behalf and integrate with a range of Google's services, Business Insider reports. Two people familiar with the project told Business Insider that employees are testing the tool internally. A Google spokesperson declined to comment, according to Business Insider.
What happened
According to Business Insider, Google is developing an AI agent internally codenamed Remy. Business Insider reports an internal document describes Remy as a "24/7 personal agent for work, school, and daily life, powered by Gemini," and says the tool is intended to "take actions on your behalf, not just answer questions or generate content." Business Insider also reports that Remy runs in a staff-only version of the Gemini app, can integrate with a range of Google's services, and is being tested by employees. A Google spokesperson declined to comment, Business Insider says.
Technical details
Per Business Insider's reporting, the internal document frames Remy as an agent-level capability layered on top of the Gemini experience. The article reports that the prototype is integrated into company-internal builds of the Gemini app and can perform actions across services; Business Insider does not publish a technical architecture, model sizes, or API details in the piece.
Editorial analysis - technical context
Companies building agentic assistants typically combine a base conversational model, a state manager, connector code to external services, and safety/guardrails. Industry patterns show that reliable action-taking requires robust state tracking, intent-disambiguation, and fine-grained permissioning for external APIs. For practitioners, implementing similar capabilities usually raises engineering work on orchestration, retry logic, and audit logging rather than purely model-accuracy improvements.
Industry context
Public reporting frames Remy as part of a broader trend toward "agentization," where vendors move from chat-only interfaces to assistants that execute tasks. Observers following the sector note that competition from products with action-taking capabilities has accelerated work on integrations, third-party connectors, and enterprise consent flows across major AI platform providers.
What to watch
- •Employee testing and any subsequent public beta or product announcement reported by credible outlets.
- •Documentation or developer-facing APIs that would show how connectors and permissions are handled.
- •Signals about how Google intends to surface agent controls, transparency, and user consent in consumer-facing releases.
Editorial analysis: Business Insider is the sole published reporting source for Remy in this item; the company has not provided a public technical brief in the cited coverage.
Scoring Rationale
This is a notable product development from a major platform provider: an employee-tested agent could accelerate agent-style features across ecosystems. The story is early-stage and currently based on internal reporting, which reduces immediate operational impact for most practitioners.
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