Google Gemini Launches AI Migration Tools to Poach ChatGPT Users
Google just made its most aggressive move yet to steal users from ChatGPT and other AI assistants. The company announced new switching tools for Gemini that let users import their entire conversation history and personal preferences from competing platforms—essentially eliminating the biggest barrier to switching AI providers.
The feature, rolling out now to all consumer accounts, works through a surprisingly simple process. Users grab a prompt from Gemini's settings, paste it into their current AI app, then copy that app's summary of their preferences back into Gemini. Within seconds, Gemini absorbs everything the other assistant learned about you—your interests, relationships, where you grew up, your recurring requests.
For chat history, it's even more direct: upload a ZIP file export from your current provider, and Gemini ingests your entire conversation archive. You can search through old threads and continue building on previous discussions as if you'd never left.
Why This Matters for the AI Race
This isn't just a convenience feature. It's a strategic weapon in the AI platform wars. The biggest moat for any AI assistant is accumulated context—months or years of conversations that make the AI genuinely useful for your specific needs. By eliminating that switching cost, Google is betting that Gemini's capabilities can win users on merit rather than lock-in.
The timing follows Google's February rollout of "Personal Intelligence" features that integrate Gmail, Photos, and Search history into Gemini's responses. Combined with the new import tools, Google is positioning Gemini as a central hub for personal AI assistance rather than a standalone chatbot.
Google is also rebranding its "past chats" feature to "memory"—a linguistic shift that signals how the company views these interactions. Your conversations aren't just archived transcripts; they're building blocks for an AI that knows you.
The Competitive Landscape
OpenAI's ChatGPT currently dominates consumer AI with its head start and strong brand recognition. But Google has advantages that matter: deep integration with services billions already use daily, and the ability to pull context from your existing Google ecosystem. If you're already in Gmail, Google Calendar, and Google Photos, Gemini can theoretically offer more relevant assistance than a standalone competitor.
The question is whether users will trust Google with even more of their personal data. The company emphasizes that imports are "secure," though details on data handling remain thin.
For now, the feature targets users already comfortable sharing personal context with AI assistants. Whether that represents the mainstream or just early adopters will determine if Google's gambit pays off.