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If you are 18 or older, or under 18 and turn Gemini Apps Activity on, then by default Google stores your Gemini Apps activity with your Google Account for up to 18 months, which you can change to 3 or 36 months in your Gemini Apps Activity setting. Info about your location, including the general area from your device, IP address, or Home or Work addresses in your Google Account, is also stored with your Gemini Apps activity. Learn more at g.co/privacypolicy/location.

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If you want to use Gemini Apps without saving your conversations to your Google Account, you can turn off your Gemini Apps Activity. You can review your prompts or delete your conversations from your Gemini Apps Activity at myactivity.google.com/product/gemini.

Conversations that have been reviewed or annotated by human reviewers (and related data like your language, device type, location info, or feedback) are not deleted when you delete your Gemini Apps activity because they are kept separately and are not connected to your Google Account. Instead, they are retained for up to three years.

If you turn off this setting or delete your Gemini Apps activity, other settings, like Web & App Activity or Location History, may continue to save location and other data as part of your use of other Google services. In addition, when you integrate and use Gemini Apps with other Google services, they will save and use your data to provide and improve their services, consistent with their policies and the Google Privacy Policy. If you use Gemini Apps to interact with third-party services, they will process your data according to their own privacy policies.

This data helps us provide, improve, and develop Google products, services, and machine-learning technologies, like those that power Gemini Apps. For more details, read the Google Privacy Policy and the Gemini Apps Privacy Notice.

We take your privacy seriously, and we do not sell your personal information to anyone. To help Gemini improve while protecting your privacy, we select a subset of conversations and use automated tools to help remove user identifying information (such as email addresses and phone numbers). These sample conversations are reviewed by trained reviewers and kept for up to three years, separately from your Google Account. Read the Gemini Apps Privacy Notice to learn more.

Google uses conversations (as well as feedback and related data) from Gemini Apps users to improve Google products (such as the generative machine-learning models that power Gemini Apps), so we can make them safer, more helpful, and work better for all users. Human review is a necessary step of the model improvement process. Through their review, rating, and rewrites, humans help enable quality improvements of generative machine-learning models like the ones that power Gemini Apps.

Gemini Apps conversations that have been reviewed by human reviewers (as well as feedback and related data like your language, device type, or location info) are not deleted when you delete your Gemini Apps activity because they are kept separately and are not connected to your Google Account. Instead, they are retained for up to 3 years.

Gemini Apps are part of our long-term, ongoing effort to develop LLMs responsibly. Throughout the course of this work, we discovered and discussed several limitations associated with LLMs, including five areas we continue to work on:

We focused on addressing these areas before launching Gemini Apps. And with the broader field, we continue to research solutions. We at Google are committed to working to improve over time. Learn more.

Location data is always collected if you use Gemini Apps so that they can provide you with a response that is relevant to your query. For example, to respond to prompts like "What's the weather?", Gemini Apps need to know your location.

Google also uses your location data, including your precise location data, for the purposes and based on the legal grounds described in the Gemini Apps Privacy Notice. Learn more about location data at g.co/privacypolicy/location.

If available, Gemini Apps may share your precise location data with another Google service, like Google Maps, to fulfill your request. The Google service that gets your location data uses it consistent with the Google Privacy Policy.

When you add an image to your prompt, Gemini Apps use Google Lens technology to understand what's in the image. For example, Google Lens might interpret an image's pixels as a cat jumping. Gemini Apps add this information to your prompt to understand your request better. Google uses this information just like any other prompt, as explained in the Gemini Apps Privacy Notice.

At this time, we don't use the actual images you upload or their pixels to improve our machine-learning technologies, unless they're included in feedback. If you submit feedback on a Gemini App response, the last image uploaded in the same conversation before that response is included as part of your feedback, unless you opt out. Google uses this data like all other feedback you provide. Learn more about how Google uses your feedback.

You can review your generated images in your pinned chats, recent chats, and Gemini Apps Activity. You can delete your prompts, which also deletes any images generated in those prompt responses, in your Gemini Apps Activity.

Gemini Extensions are Google services that work with Gemini Apps. They can better help you get things done with Gemini Apps. When Gemini Apps use extensions, they share data with extensions to find relevant information to respond to you.

Also, with your permission, Gemini Apps tell extensions who you are. This is needed for Gemini Apps to help you connect with your personal information and content in other Google services so that Gemini Apps can respond to you better. Learn how to connect Gemini Extensions.

You can choose to use Gemini Extensions that help you connect with your personal information and content in other Google services so that Gemini Apps can respond to you better. Learn more about Gemini Extensions.

Gemini takes up 514 square degrees of the northern hemisphere's second quadrant, according to Constellation Guide, making it the 30th largest constellation. It's best seen in the winter months from the Northern Hemisphere.

You can find Gemini surrounded by the constellations of Auriga, Orion, Monoceros, Canis Minor, Cancer, and Lynx. The easiest way to spot Gemini is to locate Orion's Belt, then follow the line from Rigel (Orion's right foot and brightest star), through the belt, and up towards Betelgeuse (Orion's left shoulder). Continue that line, and you'll eventually spot Castor and Pollux.

During July, the sun is right in the middle of Gemini, so it cannot be viewed at night. Being a sign of the zodiac, Gemini will travel across the sky to the south as the Earth spins, for those of us north of the Tropic of Cancer. It is between Cancer and Orion/Taurus, with the horns of Taurus pointing to it and being above Orion's head.

The word "gemini" means twins in Latin; the constellation is associated with the Greek mythological twins Castor and Pollux, for whom two of the stars in the constellation are named, according to Britannica. (Castor is not actually a single star, but a system of six stars that are so close together, they appear as one.)

Gemini is also known for lending its name to NASA's Gemini program, so-named for its two-person spacecraft, as well as for its Geminga pulsar, unique for emitting primarily gamma rays instead of X-rays or visible light, according to NASA.

Beyond Castor and Pollux, there are eight other named stars in the Gemini constellation, according to the skywatching site Constellation Guide, and numerous deep-sky objects to observe through telescopes. Plus, the radiant point of the winter Geminid meteor shower is in the constellation.

Magnitude: Magnitude is a measure of how bright an object appears from Earth; the lower an object's magnitude, the brighter it is. Magnitude can even be measured in negative numbers, which indicate higher levels of brightness than positive numbers.

Right ascension (RA): Right ascension can be considered the sky's version of longitude on Earth. It covers the east-west direction and is measured in hours, minutes and seconds. It's used in conjunction with declination to help astronomers locate celestial objects.

Declination (Dec): Declination is comparable to latitude on Earth. It measures an object's location in the north-south direction in degrees, arcminutes and arcseconds (there are 60 arcseconds in an arcmin, 60 arcmins in a degree).

Using a telescope, you can zoom in on Castor to distinctly see at least two, sometimes three, of the six stars that make up the system, according to the Milwaukee Astronomical Society. Impressively, each of these three stars is actually a double star, though the individual stars are difficult to discern without a very high-powered telescope.

Messier 35 is an open cluster of more than 500 stars that are loosely gravitationally bound. The cluster takes up an area of the sky that's about the same size as the full moon, according to the European Southern Observatory.

The faint Medusa Nebula was discovered by astronomer George O. Abell in 1955, according to Astronomy Trek. The planetary nebula, which formed when a red giant star transitioned into a white dwarf, is approximately four light-years across.

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