Google Chrome has been silently pushing a 4GB AI model to your device without asking

SolidSnake

Well-known member
Mar 27, 2015
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I'm glad I stopped using Chrome for years:

Google Chrome users who have noticed unusual disk activity or unexplained drops in available storage should look for a folder called "OptGuideOnDeviceModel" inside their Chrome directory. It holds roughly 4GB of weights for Google's Gemini Nano LLM, downloaded by the browser without user consent.

Deleting the folder offers no lasting relief – Chrome will simply redownload it. On Windows 11, the folder resides at %LOCALAPPDATA%\Google\Chrome\User Data\OptGuideOnDeviceModel. It has also been confirmed on Apple Silicon and Ubuntu machines.

https://www.techspot.com/news/112309-google-chrome-has-silently-pushing-4gb-ai-model.html
 
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SSL Management

Supporting Member
Aug 19, 2018
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I'm glad I stopped using Chrome for years:

Google Chrome users who have noticed unusual disk activity or unexplained drops in available storage should look for a folder called "OptGuideOnDeviceModel" inside their Chrome directory. It holds roughly 4GB of weights for Google's Gemini Nano LLM, downloaded by the browser without user consent.

Deleting the folder offers no lasting relief – Chrome will simply redownload it. On Windows 11, the folder resides at %LOCALAPPDATA%\Google\Chrome\User Data\OptGuideOnDeviceModel. It has also been confirmed on Apple Silicon and Ubuntu machines.

https://www.techspot.com/news/112309-google-chrome-has-silently-pushing-4gb-ai-model.html
In Windows whatever before trying to"Run" %LOCALAPPDATA%\Google\Chrome\User Data\OptGuideOnDeviceModel, you have to go to File Explorer Options in the Control Panel and remove the check mark for "Hide protected operating system files" in order to view the AppData folder, which is not recommended. The AppData folder is a hidden, protected system-level folder. Therefore, if you do remove the check mark in order to search this folder, make your you add the check mark when done.

While Google Chrome provides a secure browsing experience with various protective features, it is not the safest browser available due to its privacy issues and the potential for exploitation due to its popularity. Users concerned about privacy may want to consider alternative browsers that prioritize user data protection.

Brave is considered the safest browser to use, however it may prevent you from accessing some banking sites or any site that uses a pop-up for logins.

10 Most Secure Web Browsers in 2026: Ranked + Rated

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SolidSnake

Well-known member
Mar 27, 2015
3,177
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Been using Brave exclusively on mobile. LibreWolf sounds interesting on Windows.
 

Larry's Torch

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Apr 26, 2020
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Seriously, if you're not running software or hardware that's Windows dependent; Linux will work just fine for most of your needs.
 

masterpoonhunter

"Marriage should be a renewable contract"
Sep 15, 2019
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Google's AI aside, I am finding both Google and Microsoft applications have dropped a noticeable notch in responsivity. I put it down to the AI shit getting in the way. I am doing what I can to shut these fuckers off but I think it is getting to a point of you can't fight city hall.

And for those who have the luxury of not using Microshaft you are lucky. Some of us in the mainstream are pretty much tied to the Office/exchange system as it is a defacto standard.

I now have an older 2013 ish Lenovo Yoga laptop setup with Linux and a host of programs that seem pretty damn good. I don't have a lot of extra time to futz with all this but it took this Core 3 / 4GB / 256 GB laptop back to pretty dazzling performance!!
 
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