Gemini Launches Deep Research and Mariner
Key Points
- Google Gemini’s “Deep Research” feature appears to dramatically reduce citation hallucinations, effectively automating accurate scholarly sourcing.
- This breakthrough sparks a broader education debate: which research skills should still be taught manually versus delegated to AI, and how to prevent critical‑thinking atrophy.
- The tool blurs the line between legitimate research assistance and plagiarism, prompting higher‑education institutions to reconsider policies on AI‑generated work.
- Gemini’s “Mariner” is an experimental, agentic browser extension for Chrome that lets AI act autonomously on web pages, raising both strategic (despite antitrust pressures on Chrome) and privacy considerations.
Full Transcript
# Gemini Launches Deep Research and Mariner **Source:** [https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Qqlfu5ml41U](https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Qqlfu5ml41U) **Duration:** 00:06:00 ## Summary - Google Gemini’s “Deep Research” feature appears to dramatically reduce citation hallucinations, effectively automating accurate scholarly sourcing. - This breakthrough sparks a broader education debate: which research skills should still be taught manually versus delegated to AI, and how to prevent critical‑thinking atrophy. - The tool blurs the line between legitimate research assistance and plagiarism, prompting higher‑education institutions to reconsider policies on AI‑generated work. - Gemini’s “Mariner” is an experimental, agentic browser extension for Chrome that lets AI act autonomously on web pages, raising both strategic (despite antitrust pressures on Chrome) and privacy considerations. ## Sections - [00:00:00](https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Qqlfu5ml41U&t=0s) **Gemini Deep Research & Mariner** - The speaker explains how Google Gemini’s new Deep Research tool appears to solve citation hallucinations and introduces the Mariner agentic browser, prompting discussion on how AI will reshape research practices and the teaching of scholarly skills. ## Full Transcript
Google Gemini was such a big release
that I didn't get to talk about two of
the most important pieces that dropped
yesterday one is deep research and one
is what they're calling Mariner which is
their agentic web browser I want to talk
about both here for deep research I
think the big takeaway is that we are
learning that the hallucinations problem
that has plagg in particular research
citations through AI may be gone or may
be going away or mostly gone we have to
do work on deep research I'd love you to
try it out and let me know what you find
but playing around with it it just looks
like the ability to site correctly after
doing research on a topic is mostly
solved by this
product and if that's the case it begs
the
question how do we teach the skill of
research to people who are coming up in
the
field so as an experienced researcher
super easy you can go really fast with
it I get the application great product
I'm sure it's going to get adoption but
students are also going to use it
they're going to use it right away and I
think this is a nice doorway into one of
the larger meta questions around AI
which is that it's this enormous leveler
it's teaching us to do things faster
than we've ever done them before but it
raises a question of what are useful
skills that we still want to know how to
do versus what are skills that we are
okay letting
atrophy so one of my examples that I
like to go back to is when I was a kid
we had calculators uh we could do all of
our math on calculators but the teachers
would never let us use the calculators
because they wanted us to learn to think
logically on our own and solve math
problems similarly I think one of the
larger meta questions in education right
now is to what extent are you keeping
students from learning skills they need
in the future by keeping them from
learning with AI versus to what extent
do you actually need them to learn
without AI in order to gain the critical
thinking skills they will need to use it
properly in the
future deep research is one of those
that is aimed squarely at that debate
and we're going to see in the next few
weeks next few months how schools start
to navigate that particularly higher
education like if you're a junior or
senior in high school if you're in
college if you're in advanced degree
studies deep research is for you and
we're going to start to Grapple with
that what does that mean it's not
plagiarism researching is not plagiarism
there's something else going on on here
and it's going to be an interesting
conversation number two Mariner uh no
this is not the Seattle Mariners I'm
from Seattle we're never going to win a
World Series uh Mariner is the code name
that Google gave to their agent based
browser extension so this is an
experimental extension in Google Chrome
it is a different conversation as to why
they're launching this in Google Chrome
when Chrome is something that the
justice department is seeking to make
them sell
I think the take there is probably that
Google doesn't think the sale will
actually happen and so it thinks it's
safe to keep investing here it probably
also feels like it can't miss on agent
based AI in 2025 and it has to take the
risk
regardless anyway Mariner is out there
experimental mode it asks your
permission before taking sensitive
actions like completing a purchase but
it is able to independently navigate the
web and take actions on its own to
accomplish a larger task the demo video
I saw was using the browser to go and
plan a vacation now I will say as
someone who saw the demo video for Sora
and has now been playing with Sora from
open AI demo videos are deliberately
cherry-picked right like they're picked
to show the most effective use case the
best example the highest and best use
the thing that makes it work the best I
have played with Sora and gotten a few
good videos I've gotten a few eh videos
and I've gotten some really bad ones
I think you'll see similar results
playing with Mariner but that doesn't
mean it's not coming in 2025 I think one
of the big decisions we all will need to
make in 2025 is to what extent are you
comfortable with an agent using the
browser on your
laptop we'll have that opportunity next
year and it's going to require a
different kind of modality for us we're
used to a browser method of interaction
where the active tab is where we are and
there's other passive tabs that we can
go and access when we need them but with
an agent it's really that the agent has
a journey they're taking maybe they're
opening multiple tabs they're going
through their web search they're
accomplishing their task for you and I
think ideally you would also want the
option to be on the laptop at the same
time looking at something
else we don't really have a modality for
how that works we don't know what that
user experience looks like yet it's
going to be one of the big design
challenges of 2025 and I don't think
that Google got it right with this one
so at the end of the day if you are
installing Mariner and using it in test
mode it simply uses the active tab right
in front of you to complete its task
which means you really can't go do
something else unless you're going to
leave your laptop like you just would
sit there and stare at it that's not
saving anybody time so we're going to
have to come up with new ways for agents
to use the computer while humans also
use the computer and I think that's
going to be one of the interesting
design challenges for for the coming
year so there you go two things that you
may not have heard about that also
launched with Gemini it's like Gemini
heard that open AI did their 12 days of
open Ai and said forget that we're going
to do it all in one day we're going to
drop like a dozen things have a Quantum
chip you know have have agent-based web
browsing have a brand new large language
model all within like 24 hours it's
crazy all right we will talk soon I'm
sure the AI Gods will give us more news
shortly