Notably, the use of Gemini Nano - a large language model that works directly on the device to enhance the ability to protect users from fraudulent websites is noteworthy. At the same time, Google also launched a new smart warning feature on Chrome for Android, helping users identify visitors with spam or fake notification signs.
In addition, Google also raises warnings for Android users when receiving push-ups from websites with signs of maliciousness. Device-based machine learning models will evaluate and warn if they discover the notification to be a scam.
Users can choose to unregister to receive notifications or continue viewing blocked content. If you believe the warning is false, you can still allow to receive notification from that website in the future.
Also in this announcement, Google revealed that its AI systems are blocking hundreds of millions of fraudulent search results every day, helping to detect 20 times more fraudulent pages than before.
One of the popular tricks recently is to fake an airline customer service hotline to steal user information. Thanks to artificial intelligence solutions, Google said it has reduced this type of scam by more than 80%, minimizing the risk of users encountering fake phone numbers on search engines.