- Google launches gemini for the government specifically for the White House
- Government agencies will only pay $ 0.47 to access Gemini tools
- The agreement will not last until 2026-what happens next?
Google and the US government have gone together to announce the release of gemini for the government, described as the combination of the “commercial cloud, cutting -edge gemini models of industry and agent solutions” for maximum productivity.
The announcement comes from Google and the General Services Administration (GSA) and is part of the ONEGOV strategy for the centralized computer supply and the Trump AI action plan.
Gemini for the government will be valid until 2026 and will rely on the existing Google agreements with the United States government.
Google launches gemstone strongly reduced for the government
The GEMINIs for the government will cost $ 0.47 per agency and take an agreement on the Google workspace with savings of 71% for government agencies – all activated through renewed purchasing power through the ONEGOV strategy of GSA.
“Building on our work space offer for federal employees,” Gemini for Government “gives federal agencies access to our complete AI innovation stack, including tools such as Notebooklm and Veo propelled by our latest models and our secure cloud infrastructure, so that they can deliver their important missions”, commented Sundar Pichai de Google Sundar Pichai.
Government for the government include Google quality business research, the generation of videos and images, the IA carnet notebook, deep research agents, ideas generation agents and support for workers to build their own agents.
“We are a long -term strategic partner for America, deeply invested in the mission, innovation and security of our government,” noted Karen Dahut, CEO of the Google public sector, pointing to the figures in mind like the 100,000 American workers from Google and its data and officers in 26 states.
With the agreement that should last a year, we don’t know what’s going on. The GSA could renew or extend the agreement, or the competition could once again open while the White House is looking for cheaper or less expensive AI tools.