The General Services Administration and Google finalized an agreement to provide the Gemini chatbot to federal agencies via a 'Gemini for Government' offering priced at $0.47 per agency. Google will integrate enterprise search and multimedia generation, offer an AI-enabled notebook, pre-packaged AI agents, and let civilian employees create virtual assistants. The agreement sits under OneGov for centralized software acquisition and is available through GSA's Multiple Award Schedule alongside Anthropic's Claude and OpenAI's ChatGPT. The GSA positioned the deal as advancing the President's AI Action Plan to accelerate AI adoption across government and transform agency operations.
The General Services Administration and Google have reached an agreement covering the availability of the tech giant's Gemini chatbot across government, a move both sides tout as providing a "comprehensive AI solution for federal agencies." Google will provide a "Gemini for Government" offering, along with its related artificial intelligence and cloud services, at a price of $0.47 per agency. This pact announced Thursday is separate to the April unveiling of steep discounts pertaining to Google's Workspace software suite for cloud-based productivity tools.
Under the Gemini agreement, Google will be responsible for incorporating enterprise search and multimedia generation capabilities into the overall offering. Agencies also will have access to an AI-enabled notebook tool, pre-packaged AI agents, and the ability for civilian employees to create their own virtual assistants. Both the Gemini and Workspace agreements fall under OneGov, an initiative GSA unveiled in the spring to centralize how agencies acquire consumer and enterprise software.
Collection
[
|
...
]