https://aistudio.google.com/
Model - gemini-2.5-pro-preview-05-06
Login - SSO with your gmail account
Remember prohibitions for Gen AI - https://policies.google.com/terms/generative-ai/use-policy
Usage policy in easy language -
- Be a Good Human:
- Don't do illegal stuff: Don't use these tools for anything against the law.
- Protect kids: Absolutely no creating or sharing anything that harms or exploits children.
- No hate or harassment: Don't make content that's hateful, abusive, or harasses others.
- No harmful tech stuff: Don't use it to make viruses, malware, or try to hack things.
- Be Honest and Respectful:
- Don't spread lies or trick people: Don't create fake news, impersonate others to deceive, or make misleading content (like deepfakes for bad purposes).
- Respect privacy: Don't create or share private, intimate images of people without their permission.
- No spam: Don't use it to create tons of unwanted junk mail or ads.
- Be careful with personal info: Don't use it to generate people's private information (like addresses, phone numbers) without a very good reason and their consent.
- Safety First:
- Don't promote dangerous things: Don't create content that encourages violence, self-harm, or dangerous activities.
- Don't promote illegal/restricted goods: No using it to help sell illegal drugs, weapons, or other highly regulated and potentially harmful things.
- Important Reminders from Google:
- AI isn't perfect: What the AI creates might sometimes be wrong, biased, or incomplete. Don't just assume it's 100% accurate.
- Not for serious advice: Crucially, don't use these AI tools for medical, legal, or financial advice. Always talk to a real, qualified professional for that kind of important stuff.
- You're responsible: You are responsible for how you use these tools and what you create with them.
- Google can step in: If you break these rules, Google can stop you from using the tools or take other actions.
- AI's creations aren't Google's opinion: Just because an AI tool creates something, it doesn't mean Google agrees with it or says it's true.
- Sometimes, you might need to say it's AI-made: For certain uses, Google might require you to let people know that the content was generated by AI.
In short: Use Google's creative AI tools responsibly, ethically, and legally. Don't use them to harm, deceive, or do anything shady. And remember, they're tools, not all-knowing experts, especially for important life decisions.
Privacy policy - **https://policies.google.com/privacy** ,
Terms of use - **https://policies.google.com/terms**
Terms of user and Privacy policy in easy language
. Your Privacy & What Information Google Collects (from the Privacy Policy)
- What they know about you:
- Things you tell them: When you sign up for Gmail or YouTube, you give them your name, email, maybe your phone number.
- Things they learn as you use their stuff: What you search for, videos you watch on YouTube, places you look up on Maps, websites you visit (if you're using Chrome and signed in), apps you use on Android, your emails in Gmail, your documents in Google Drive. If you let them, they might also know your location.
- Why they collect it:
- To make their services work for you: So your search results are relevant, YouTube knows what videos to suggest, and Maps can give you directions.
- To make their services better: They look at how people use things (in a general, often anonymous way) to improve their services, fix problems, and invent new features.
- To show you ads: A lot of Google's services are free because they show ads. They use what they know about your interests (from your searches, videos, etc.) to try and show you ads you might actually find useful, rather than random ones.
- To keep things safe: To protect your account from hackers and to stop bad actors from abusing their services.
- Sharing your info:
- Google says they don't sell your personal information (like your name and email) to advertisers or other companies in the way you might think.
- Advertisers tell Google "show my ad to people interested in X," and Google shows the ad to those people without telling the advertiser who those people are.
- They might share your info if you ask them to (like sharing a Google Doc), for legal reasons (if the police have a warrant), or with other companies that help them run their services (but these companies have to follow strict privacy rules).
- Your controls:
- You have a Google Account where you can see and manage a lot of this information. You can turn off certain types of data collection (like location history or web activity), delete past activity, and control what ads you see.
- You can also download a copy of your data.
2. Keeping Your Information Safe (Data Security & Information Security)