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Google adds Gemini to Maps for smarter trip planning and 3D navigation. Plus, an AI security test broke into McKinseyβs internal AI system in under two hours.
In todays email:
Daily Update
Social Media
Todayβs Highlights
YouTube
Today Trend
Social Media
Read time: 6 min
DAILY UPDATE

Google adds Gemini AI to Maps with smart trip questions and 3D navigation.
Google released a major upgrade to Google Maps powered by Gemini AI, bringing new tools that help people plan trips faster and navigate more easily.
Ask Maps lets users ask simple questions about routes or places. Gemini searches through 300M+ locations and reviews to give helpful answers for trip planning.
Immersive Navigation shows the route in detailed 3D, using Street View and aerial images to display buildings, crosswalks, bridges, and other real world details.
Maps also adds more natural voice guidance, Street View previews of destinations, parking information, and clear comparisons for alternate routes.
This move shows how Google is putting AI into everyday tools people already use. With Gemini now inside Maps, Gmail, Docs, Android, and more, Google can bring AI to billions of users without asking them to download anything new. This wide reach could become one of Googleβs biggest advantages in the AI race.
Read moreβ¦
SOCIAL MEDIA

TODAYβS HIGHLIGHT

An AI security test broke into McKinseyβs internal AI system in less than two hours and exposed millions of confidential records.
Security startup CodeWall revealed that its AI agent successfully accessed McKinsey & Companyβs internal AI tool Lilli, gaining full read and write access to a large database of company data. The system contained millions of messages, files, and user accounts, many stored in plain text.
Lilli, McKinseyβs internal AI used for chat, analysis, and document search, is used by about 70% of staff, around 45,000 employees, to work with over 100,000 internal documents.
CodeWallβs AI agent discovered exposed API documentation with 22 endpoints that required no authentication, allowing access to the system. One basic flaw opened the door to the database.
The database included 46.5 million messages, 728,000 files with client data, 57,000 user accounts, and 95 system control prompts related to strategy discussions, M&A deals, and client work.
This case shows that even major firms like McKinsey can miss basic security checks. As more companies build internal AI tools for important business work, they must make sure their systems are properly secured, or sensitive company data could easily be exposed.
Read moreβ¦
YOUTUBE
TODAY TREND
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SOCIAL MEDIA

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