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Google simplified transition to Gemini by adding chat history import from ChatGPT and Claude

Google released a tool for Gemini that allows users to upload chat history and context from other AI applications. The idea is straightforward: users don't…

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Google simplified transition to Gemini by adding chat history import from ChatGPT and Claude
Source: Bloomberg Tech. Collage: Hamidun News.
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Google has released new migration tools for Gemini that allow users to upload chat history and context from other AI applications. The company is clearly attacking one of the strongest barriers in the AI assistant market: users' reluctance to lose accumulated dialogue experience when switching services.

Why This Matters for Google

The AI assistant market is maturing rapidly, and competition now focuses not just on model quality, but on ease of entry. Many users already live inside one chatbot: they have dozens of conversation threads there, work notes, personal instructions, drafts, and long chains of questions. Switching to another assistant is psychologically and practically difficult, even if it's stronger at certain tasks.

Google is trying to remove exactly this barrier and make starting with Gemini less painful. For Google, this is especially important because competition comes from already-established players. The company is clearly targeting the audience of ChatGPT and Claude — services with strong user habit and a large volume of accumulated dialogues.

If a person can transfer their context from another application to Gemini, the decision to try a new product becomes easier. It's no longer a "start from scratch" scenario, but rather "come in with what you already have."

How the Migration Works

According to Google's description, Gemini will now be able to accept uploaded chat history and context from other AI applications. This doesn't look like a simple cosmetic feature. Essentially, the import becomes part of onboarding: the user doesn't arrive at an empty window, but in an environment where they can immediately continue working with their previous background, themes, and logic of past dialogues. For those who use AI every day, this might be more important than another abstract benchmark boost.

  • Transfers accumulated context to the new service
  • Reduces the need to manually rebuild old dialogues
  • Simplifies parallel comparison of different models
  • Removes part of the fear of losing work history when switching assistants

This move solves a problem that has long been underestimated: the value created by modern chatbots comes not only from the model itself, but also from user memory within the product. The more old conversations, templates, and familiar scenarios a person has, the higher the cost of leaving. If the import actually works conveniently, Google gets a chance to attack not just the technological leadership of competitors, but also their hidden defense — accumulated user archives.

The Battle for Habit

In 2026, competition between AI assistants is increasingly shifting from the question "who is smarter" to "who is more convenient for everyday work." Many users already have their main bot for texts, analysis, code, or research. But this leadership isn't held only by answer quality.

It's held by habit: the bot already knows your request style, project history, favorite response format, and a set of old discussions you can return to. The import tool attacks exactly this advantage. For professional users and teams, this can be a particularly sensitive change.

When months of work discussions have accumulated in a service, migration becomes a separate project, and testing alternatives gets postponed. The ability to upload history and context makes Gemini a more realistic option not only for curious early adopters, but also for those who have been sticking with ChatGPT or Claude simply because everything is already configured there. In other words, Google is lowering the cost of experimentation.

What This Means

Google is showing that the next major battle in the AI market is about the portability of accumulated experience. If users can painlessly transfer history between assistants, the market will become less closed: people will more often keep multiple tools at once and choose the best one for a specific task. For Gemini, this is a chance to grow not only at the expense of new users, but also at the expense of those who are already deeply rooted in competitor ecosystems.

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