Google's Private AI Compute promises advanced AI on your personal devices while your data stays yours
Google wants your phone to think bigger while also keeping your data safe, and to achieve that, Google has built a cloud system that connects devices to heavy-duty Gemini models while keeping personal data sealed off—even from Google itself. It's called Private AI Compute, and much like how its name is similar to Apple's Private Cloud Compute, it also works similarly
It's a solution to a problem that's been brewing: AI keeps getting smarter and hungrier for processing power, but people want their personal information to stay personal. Your phone can only do so much on its own, and Google says many AI tasks now need "advanced reasoning and computational power" beyond what fits in your pocket.
Private AI Compute works through what Google calls a "secure, fortified space" running on its own chips—custom Tensor Processing Units paired with Titanium Intelligence Enclaves. Your device connects to this protected cloud environment through encrypted channels, creating a sealed pathway where your data flows but stays invisible to everyone else, including Google.
The company brought in NCC Group to verify its privacy claims independently. The system encrypts everything in transit and uses AMD-based Trusted Execution Environments to wall off memory from the broader network, blocking outside access at the hardware level.
Pixel devices are getting the first taste of this technology. Magic Cue on the Pixel 10 now delivers sharper, more contextual suggestions by pulling from those beefier cloud models. Meanwhile, the Recorder app on Pixel 8 and newer phones can now summarise transcriptions in seven languages: English, Mandarin Chinese, Hindi, Italian, French, German, and Japanese.
Google says this is only the start. More products will get Private AI Compute capabilities down the line, and users who want to peek under the hood can track when it's running through developer settings.
How Google’s Private Compute keeps your information private
Private AI Compute works through what Google calls a "secure, fortified space" running on its own chips—custom Tensor Processing Units paired with Titanium Intelligence Enclaves. Your device connects to this protected cloud environment through encrypted channels, creating a sealed pathway where your data flows but stays invisible to everyone else, including Google.
The company brought in NCC Group to verify its privacy claims independently. The system encrypts everything in transit and uses AMD-based Trusted Execution Environments to wall off memory from the broader network, blocking outside access at the hardware level.
First features arriving on Pixel phones
Google says this is only the start. More products will get Private AI Compute capabilities down the line, and users who want to peek under the hood can track when it's running through developer settings.
Popular from Technology
- One of the highest-paid employees of Meta and company AI chief has advice for teens: 'You should spend all your time…'
- CEO of America's largest bank Jamie Dimon on not carrying his phone around, says: I want to ...
- 10 best Gemini AI photo editing prompts to create stunning couple portraits
- Bill Gates: We make it clear that it is not our role to say, OK, the US government wants to save money, so we will ...
- After Denmark and Netherlands; now UK is probing if China can 'shutdown' hundreds of buses on its roads
end of article
Trending Stories
- Delhi Red Fort Blast Live Updates: Delhi, J&K hold candlelight march in solidarity with car blast victims
- Michael Duarte cause of death: How did the food influencer FoodWithBearHands die
- Delhi blast: Was Red Fort attack planned for January 26? What Faridabad doctor's phone revealed
- Red Fort blast a revenge strike: Jaish-e-Muhammed planned it after Operation Sindoor damaged Pakistan HQ
- Red Fort blast captured on CCTV: Exact moment when Hyundai i20 bursts into fireball on busy street packed with vehicles - watch
- 'She is my wife, nothing to hide': Rashid Khan clarifies viral photo, confirms marriage in heartfelt post
- CAT admit card 2025 released: Download from iimcat.ac.in for November 30 exam
Featured in technology
- China blames US for $13 billion 2020 Bitcoin theft, stealing 127,272 Bitcoins from one of the world's largest cryptocurrency miners
- Sony launches a more affordable Japan-only PlayStation 5 console
- What a person can really see when you share your live location
- Wordle today #1607: Hints and answers for today’s Wordle (November 12, 2025)
- NYT Connections today’s hints and answers (#885) for 12 November 2025
- Sony launches 27-inch Playstation gaming monitor in US and China: QHD display, built-in stereo speakers and other features to know
Photostories
- Janhvi Kapoor to Rhea Chakraborty: Top celebrity fashion moments to bookmark for the day
- 6 Rahu and Ketu temples in India that every devotee must visit
- Egg versus Paneer: Which is a better source of protein for breakfast
- 7 plants that make the home aquarium look like a beautiful ecosystem
- 8 Things done by parents that secretly stress the child out
- 7 habits that will help your child become a future leader
- 5 times gentle parenting is not the best way out there
- Ishaan Khatter’s journey from Bollywood beginnings to international acclaim
- Explained: 10 must-know facts about Faridabad’s Al-Falah University
- In pictures: PM Modi meets victims at LNJP Hospital after Delhi blast tragedy; vows culprits won’t be spared
Up Next
Start a Conversation
Post comment