Google Gemini Calendar Flaw Allows Meeting Invites to Leak Private Data

 

Though built to make life easier, artificial intelligence helpers sometimes carry hidden risks. A recent study reveals that everyday features – such as scheduling meetings – can become pathways for privacy breaches. Instead of protecting data, certain functions may unknowingly expose it. Experts from Miggo Security identified a flaw in Google Gemini’s connection to Google Calendar. Their findings show how an ordinary invite might secretly gather private details. What looks innocent on the surface could serve another purpose beneath. 

A fresh look at Gemini shows it helps people by understanding everyday speech and pulling details from tools like calendars. Because the system responds to words instead of rigid programming rules, security experts from Miggo discovered a gap in its design. Using just text that seems normal, hackers might steer the AI off course. These insights, delivered openly to Hackread.com, reveal subtle risks hidden in seemingly harmless interactions. 
A single calendar entry is enough to trigger the exploit – no clicking, no downloads, no obvious red flags. Hidden inside what looks like normal event details sits coded directions meant for machines, not people. Rather than arriving through email attachments or shady websites, the payload comes disguised as routine scheduling data. The wording blends in visually, yet when processed by Gemini, it shifts into operational mode. Instructions buried in plain sight tell the system to act without signaling intent to the recipient. 
This article has been indexed from CySecurity News – Latest Information Security and Hacking Incidents

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