Would you let robots spend your money?

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Would you let robots spend your money?

Google's Universal Cart Puts AI in Charge of Your Shopping Cart—But Should It?

Just days after Google I/O wrapped in Mountain View, the company rolled out its most ambitious step yet into AI-driven commerce: the Universal Cart. Announced on May 19, the feature lets Gemini act as a personal shopping agent that can browse, compare, and complete purchases across multiple retailers without users switching tabs or apps. The tool already works inside Gemini and is slated to expand into YouTube and Gmail later this year. The central question hanging over the launch is simple: are consumers ready to let an AI spend their money?

The Universal Cart builds directly on earlier Google experiments with shopping agents. Where previous versions could only suggest products or add items to a single-site cart, the new system maintains a persistent, cross-platform basket. A user can ask Gemini to "find the best noise-cancelling headphones under $200 with fast delivery to Tokyo," and the model pulls options from multiple merchants, factors in shipping times and return policies, then holds the selections until the user approves checkout. Early demos showed the AI negotiating minor price adjustments and applying coupons automatically—tasks that once required manual effort across several websites.

From a technical standpoint, the advance rests on tighter integration between Google's large language models and its merchant APIs. Rather than scraping retailer pages, Gemini now receives structured product data in real time, including inventory levels and dynamic pricing. This reduces hallucinations while allowing the model to reason about trade-offs such as "this pair costs 12 percent more but ships two days sooner." Google has also added explicit user controls: spending limits, preferred brands, and veto power over any item before payment is processed.

For consumers in the Asia-Pacific region the implications are particularly sharp. Japan's e-commerce market already exceeds ¥20 trillion annually, dominated by platforms like Rakuten and Amazon Japan. A universal agent that can fluidly move between those services and smaller specialty stores could lower friction for busy urban professionals. Yet trust remains a cultural hurdle. Japanese shoppers have long favored explicit confirmation steps and familiar payment methods such as convenience-store cash settlement. Handing an AI the final click may feel like a step too far until clear liability rules exist for mistaken purchases or data leaks.

Privacy considerations loom large. The Universal Cart must access purchase history, saved addresses, and payment credentials to function. Google says all transaction data stays encrypted and that users can review a full audit log of every AI action. Still, regulators in Tokyo and Brussels are watching closely. Any perception that Google is steering users toward its own financial products or favored retailers could trigger antitrust scrutiny similar to past cases involving search rankings.

On the positive side, the system could deliver genuine time savings. Consider a parent in Singapore who needs school uniforms, stationery, and sports gear before the new term. Instead of visiting five different sites, one natural-language prompt could surface compliant options, apply government subsidies where available, and schedule staggered deliveries. Early internal tests reportedly showed users completing such multi-item hauls in under four minutes versus the previous average of 22 minutes.

Risks, however, are not theoretical. An overeager model might interpret "upgrade my laptop" as license to select a high-margin configuration the user never intended. Price-comparison logic could favor merchants offering Google the largest affiliate fees. And while spending caps exist, they are user-set; nothing yet prevents the AI from suggesting workarounds once a limit is reached. These edge cases will matter most in markets where average transaction values are lower and consumers are more price-sensitive.

From Tokyo, the rollout also highlights a broader shift in how global platforms approach Asia. Rather than treating the region as a late-adopter market, Google is positioning the Universal Cart as a default experience that must accommodate local payment rails and regulatory expectations from day one. If successful, the tool could pressure domestic players, Rakuten, LINE Shopping, Shopee, to accelerate their own agentic features or risk losing the convenience war.

The deeper question remains one of agency. When an AI can scan reviews, calculate total cost of ownership, and execute payment in seconds, the role of the human shopper changes from researcher to approver. For some that represents welcome relief; for others it erodes the pleasure of discovery and the sense of control over household finances. Google's bet is that enough users will choose relief.

As the Universal Cart begins limited testing with U.S. and select APAC accounts this month, the coming weeks will reveal whether the convenience outweighs the unease. Early feedback from Japanese beta users has been cautiously optimistic, provided the AI continues to surface clear explanations for every recommendation. The technology is advancing quickly. Whether consumer trust keeps pace is the real test now unfolding.

This is Kenji Tanaka for Global1.news, reporting from Tokyo.

Source: The Verge via YouTube — 2026-05-19T18:41:47+00:00.

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