Human
Gemini can now create personalized AI images by digging around in Google Photos
Google is making it easier to feed your photos into Nano Banana for more personal image generation.
25 days ago
Google has quietly crossed a new line: your private photo archive is now fodder for personalized AI artwork—if you let it. The promise is frictionless creativity; the risk is turning your digital life into one big training ground for Google’s ambitions.
Early 2026, Google began rolling out “Personal Intelligence” in Gemini, letting paying users wire the chatbot directly into their Google accounts for custom answers. On April 16, that wiring got visual. Google plugged its Nano Banana 2 image model into Google Photos so Gemini can now “create personalized AI images by digging around in Google Photos.”
The Verge framed it as lifestyle AI: connect Photos and Gemini’s Personal Intelligence, and you can ask it to “Design my dream house” or “Create a picture of my desert island essentials,” with results that “automatically reflect your specific tastes and lifestyle, gleaned from the Google apps you’ve connected to.”
By the same day, The Next Web zoomed out: Nano Banana-powered image generation was added across Personal Intelligence, letting Gemini draw not just on Photos but Gmail, Calendar, Drive, and more to produce images “informed by who you are and what you do, not just what you type into the prompt.”
Inside Google, the line is that this is about less explaining, more creating. The official Gemini account boasted that Personal Intelligence now gives Gemini “an understanding of your preferences and interests when generating images, so you can spend more time creating and less time explaining,” amplified by DeepMind chief Demis Hassabis.
Reporters, meanwhile, are fixated on the data bargain. Ars Technica notes that while the feature is opt-in and Google says it won’t “directly train” models on your private Google Photos library, it does train on “limited info” like prompts and responses—enough to make privacy advocates twitch.,
For now, the power to let an AI rifle through your life is reserved for moneyed early adopters. Plus, Pro, and Ultra subscribers in the US are first in line, with free users coming “over the next few weeks” and Europe conspicuously left out of the launch—likely a nod to regulators who are already circling hyper-personalized AI.,
The direction of travel is clear: Gemini isn’t just reading what you say. It’s learning who you are—and turning that into a product.