[00:04] Nina Park: I'm Nina Park. Welcome to Model Behavior. It is March 10th, 2026. Today we examine how Google is shifting exgenerative AI strategy from standalone chatbots to deep cross-app integration. [00:22] Announcer: It is a significant move, Nina. For a long time, the workflow was manual. You would find an email, copy the text, and paste it into a document. [00:30] Announcer: Google's update today attempts to bridge those gaps directly. [00:33] Nina Park: Exactly. [00:34] Nina Park: Mashable reports that Google is rolling out several new Gemini-powered features in beta for [00:39] Nina Park: docs, sheets, slides, and drive. [00:42] Nina Park: The headline feature is Help Me Create in Docs. [00:45] Nina Park: Users can now prompt Gemini to draft a newsletter or an itinerary by pulling data directly [00:51] Nina Park: from their Gmail or drive. [00:53] Nina Park: Yuli Kwan Kim, Google's VP of Workspace, noted that this is intended to handle the manual [00:59] Nina Park: preparation that often stalls projects. [01:02] Announcer: And notice they are being very specific about manual preparation. [01:07] Announcer: In Sheets, Google is claiming a benchmark success rate of over 70% on Spreadsheet Bench. [01:14] Announcer: They're suggesting this approaches human expert performance for real-world editing tasks. [01:20] Announcer: Nina, did they clarify if this benchmark was independently verified or if it was an internal study? [01:26] Nina Park: The next web notes that while spreadsheet bench is a public benchmark, the nine times speed improvement figure Google cited for data entry was based on a controlled internal study of 95 participants. [01:40] Nina Park: So results in the wild might vary. [01:42] Nina Park: Beyond sheets, Google Drive is getting AI overviews in its search bar, similar to what we see in Google Search, to summarize files without needing to open them. [01:53] Announcer: That essentially turns Drive from a storage folder into a knowledge base. [01:57] Announcer: However, these features are currently in beta for Ultra and Pro subscribers, [02:02] Announcer: and the drive tools are restricted to the United States for Mao. [02:06] Announcer: It feels like a direct response to Microsoft 365 co-pilot, [02:09] Announcer: which has been aggressive in this space. [02:12] Nina Park: The competition is certainly heating up, but not just in product releases. [02:16] Nina Park: We are also seeing a major legal escalation. [02:20] Nina Park: According to reporting from Coindesk Today, Anthropic is suing the United States government. [02:25] Nina Park: The claim is that their AI systems have been allegedly blacklisted. [02:29] Announcer: That is a striking accusation, Nina. [02:33] Announcer: If the government is indeed blacklisting specific models, it raises questions about the criteria being used, [02:39] Announcer: whether it's based on safety protocols, national security, or perhaps procurement preferences. [02:45] Announcer: We do not have the full filing yet, but a lawsuit of this scale suggests a massive breakdown in communication between the lab and federal regulators. [02:54] Nina Park: It certainly complicates the narrative of cooperation, we usually hear from these companies. [02:59] Nina Park: Between Google's deepest product integration yet and Anthropic's legal friction, [03:04] Nina Park: the boundaries of how these models are deployed and governed are being redefined in real time. [03:09] Announcer: Thank you for listening to Model Behavior. [03:13] Announcer: You can find more analysis at mb.neuralnewscast.com. [03:19] Announcer: Neural Newscast is AI-assisted, human-reviewed. [03:25] Announcer: View our AI Transparency Policy at neuralnewscast.com.