TheSuper Bowlis this Sunday, and with the rapidrise of AIworldwide, there are bound to be lots of commercials centered around it. However, a common issue with AI is that it sometimes gets things wrong, andGoogleseems to be learning that thehard way.
In itsSuper Bowl commercialabout a Wisconsin cheese business utilizing AI in the workplace, Gemini erroneously answered a prompt about Gouda cheese, claiming that it accounts for “50 to 60 percent of the world’s cheese consumption,” which is not correct. The error was first spotted by X userNate Hake. you’re able to check out a screenshot from the ad below, which Google has since edited out.

In a statement toThe Verge, a professor at Cornell University told them that while Gouda cheese is a “common single variety in world trade”, it is “almost assuredly not the most widely consumed.” The claim seems to have originated from a website calledCheese.com, whichusers on Reddit11 years ago were quick to dispute also, with one saying “I don’t think this is anywhere near true.”
Google Gemini
Gemini is Google’s premier AI assistant app for the Android operating system that can provide text responses to questions, generate and analyze images, and is now available on iOS.
See what Google is ‘thinking’ with new Gemini update
Google is rolling out a number of updates for Gemini 2.0 and making its new ‘reasoning’ model available for free to users in the Gemini app.
Google removed the claim from the ad
The tech giant was called out on X for Gemini’s Gouda cheese slip up
After facing backlash online, Google has removed the claim about Gouda cheese from its Wisconsin Gemini Super Bowl commercial. X user Nate Hake was the first to point out the error, andcalled outGoogle for its “AI hallucination” about Gouda cheese in its Gemini ad. This post prompted aresponse on Xfrom Jerry Dischler, president of cloud applications at Google, who challenged Hake’s assertion.
“Not a hallucination. Gemini is grounded in the Web – and users can always check the results and references. In this case, multiple sites across the web include the 50-60 percent stat,” Dischler said on X. Shortly afterward, Google edited the claim about Gouda cheese out of the Gemini commercial, prompting Hawke to clap back at the tech giant.
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Who knew that a commercial about cheese could cause such an uproar? But thanks to Gemini, it did. This shows that even though tech giants are marketing AI as the productivity tool of the future, it can still make mistakes. AI can be extremely useful for researching ideas and finding information; however, as Google has learned here, it’s always best to double-check them.
Google sounds the alarm bells over criminal Gemini AI usage
Google’s Threat Intelligence Group has discovered evidence of Gemini AI being used for cyber criminality.

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