Skip to main content
  1. Home
  2. Computing
  3. Features

Every app on my phone has decided I need AI, and none of them bothered to ask

AI assistants are invading everything from photo libraries to messaging apps, and dismissing them only seems to guarantee they’ll return later.

Add as a preferred source on Google
Electronics, Phone, Mobile Phone
Paulo Vargas / Digital Trends

My wife doesn’t use AI very much. She isn’t philosophically opposed to it, nor is she waiting for the machines to overthrow civilization. She simply opens Google Photos because she wants to look at her photos.

Lately, however, the app keeps greeting her with invitations to try its AI tools. Google would very much like her to search her library conversationally, generate something new, or ask Gemini to edit a photo. She dismisses the prompt, gets on with her life, and eventually meets it again.

Recommended Videos

That small irritation made me look at the apps on my own phone. Apparently, nearly all of them have reached the same conclusion. I don’t merely need AI occasionally. I need it waiting inside every search bar, messaging app, music player, and document reader I already use.

My apps have all caught AI fever

Google Photos now includes Ask Photos, which uses Gemini to search your library, answer questions about it, and make edits from written instructions. Google says the feature remains experimental and may produce inaccurate results. You can disable it, although doing so requires digging through Photos settings, Preferences, and finally Gemini features in Photos.

The setting exists, which is better than nothing. Still, someone who repeatedly dismisses an invitation has already communicated a preference. The app simply interprets “not now” as “please ask me again once I’ve forgotten why I was annoyed.”

Meta has taken a broader approach. Its assistant now lives across WhatsApp, Instagram, Facebook, and Messenger. One blue circle has managed to follow users across four separate apps, like a helpful shop assistant who somehow appears in every aisle.

Spotify has its AI DJ, AI-generated playlists, and conversational music search. Adobe Reader puts an AI assistant beside the humble PDF. Microsoft went further and renamed its Office hub the Microsoft 365 Copilot app, presumably because “Microsoft 365, Now With AI Whether You Asked or Not” tested poorly.

Now you can talk to Spotify:
🎧 It plays what you want
🎧 It adds what you want
🎧 It even answers what you’re curious about

What’s the first thing you’d say? pic.twitter.com/uKajUFpA1G

— Spotify (@Spotify) July 14, 2026

Microsoft does let desktop users disable Copilot in Word, Excel, and PowerPoint. Its documentation says the same switch isn’t available in the iOS, Android, or web versions. Mobile users can change broader privacy settings instead, potentially affecting other connected features in the process.

That’s less an off switch and more a circuit breaker.

Some of these tools are genuinely useful

I’m not pretending every AI feature is worthless. Finding a particular photo by describing the half-remembered circumstances around it is useful. Asking a 70-page PDF a specific question can save time. Conversational music search might succeed where Spotify’s ordinary search bar sometimes behaves as though I’ve given it a riddle.

I also pay for ChatGPT and Claude. Clearly, my objection isn’t that artificial intelligence exists.

The difference is intent. When I open an AI app, I’m choosing an AI interaction. When I open Photos, I want my photos. When I open WhatsApp, I want to message someone. When I open Spotify, I probably already know what I want to hear.

These apps worked before AI became their loudest new feature. Now, the assistant is increasingly presented as the natural center of the experience, while everything the app was originally built to do gets pushed slightly to the side.

The industry appears terrified that AI might become invisible. Every assistant needs a button, every button needs a colorful glow, and every glow must occupy the exact piece of screen where your thumb already goes.

A genuinely useful feature doesn’t need to keep introducing itself. It quietly becomes part of your routine because it solves a problem better than the old method. The current approach feels closer to software companies desperately proving that they, too, possess an AI strategy.

“No” should survive the next update

These companies keep promising software that understands us. Google Photos can identify faces, places, objects, and half-remembered vacations from years ago. Spotify studies what we play, when we play it, and which song we abandon after 12 seconds. Meta has spent years building systems designed to predict what will keep us staring at a screen.

Yet remembering that someone already declined an AI feature apparently remains beyond the limits of modern computing. Sure, we can find a way in their documentation a way to opt-out, but why make opt-in the default?

A dismissed prompt returns. A hidden button becomes more prominent. An app update quietly gives the assistant another opportunity to introduce itself. The software remembers everything except the preference that conflicts with the company’s current strategy.

Perhaps these apps already understand what “no” means. They’ve simply decided that remembering it would be bad for engagement.

Paulo Vargas
Paulo Vargas is an English major turned reporter turned technical writer, with a career that has always circled back to…
Shopping for Back-to-school? These are the gaming laptops I’d recommend
Powerful enough for AAA games, practical enough for everyday lectures, assignments, and everything in between.
oled gaming laptop

Every gamer knows the pain of trying to do too much with the wrong hardware. Back-to-School is the perfect excuse to fix that. A good gaming laptop shouldn’t just hit high frame rates -- it should also survive endless browser tabs, assignments, coding sessions, video edits, and everything else college throws at it. These five machines strike that balance better than most, which is exactly why they’d be my picks this semester.

Alienware 16 Aurora

Read more
Google’s AI just recreated the best goal ever by Pele that was never actually filmed
My heart is full after watching the clip, and it will bring tears of joy to every true football fan.
Pele footballer.

If you look at the AI landscape, a majority of its usage in the film and television industry has been pretty controversial. Bringing dead actors to life on a screen, using AI to record vintage songs that were never completed, or just using it to film scenes or handle any other part of the creative process — the backlash has been pretty vocal. But there are a few slivers of hopeful AI usage, too, and Google just delivered one of those in a heartwarming fashion using Gemini AI.

I wonder the world never archived

Read more
OpenAI patches ChatGPT desktop after user backlash over its recent redesign
ChatGPT's desktop app gets synced history, projects, and a new Chat and Work mode switch
Man using ChatGPT on a laptop

ChatGPT's desktop app is getting a much-needed course correction. When OpenAI merged Chat, Work, and Codex into one unified desktop app roughly a week ago, the experience came with more issues than intended, burying basic features like chat history and making it awkward to switch between modes. Now OpenAI has rolled out a batch of fixes based on feedback to make the app feel consistent regardless of which device you use.

https://twitter.com/thsottiaux/status/2077928427936710901?s=46

Read more