TL;DR
- New Shopping Features: Google announced AI-powered shopping features that let users buy from Etsy and Wayfair directly within Search and Gemini without leaving the platform.
- Privacy Concerns: Senator Elizabeth Warren raised alarms about potential consumer privacy violations and price manipulation within hours of the announcement.
- Universal Commerce Protocol: The Universal Commerce Protocol powers direct purchases, with Shopify, Target, and Walmart integrations coming soon.
- Industry Context: The move reflects pressure across the AI industry to monetize substantial infrastructure investments as tech giants spend $650 billion on AI this year.
Google Vice President Vidhya Srinivasan announced AI-powered shopping features Wednesday that let users buy from Etsy and Wayfair directly within Search and Gemini without leaving the platform, prompting Senator Elizabeth Warren to sound the alarm on the new partnerships within hours.
Srinivasan described the features in her third annual letter to the advertising industry. She said that Google reports “tremendous interest from hundreds of top tech companies, payments partners and retailers” interested in integrating Google’s Universal Commerce Protocol (UCP) since its launch.
“This could allow Google and its partners to violate consumer privacy and manipulate consumers into spending more and paying higher prices. I’m pushing for answers”
Elizabeth Warren, U.S. Senator (via Warren Senate)
The features introduce new advertising formats in AI Mode that allow brands to offer products and discounts, part of a broader push to monetize the $650 billion tech giants are spending on AI infrastructure this year.
The near-instantaneous political response indicates heightened regulatory scrutiny of AI-powered commerce before the technology reaches scale. This positions Google in a fundamentally different environment than earlier search innovations that could mature before attracting congressional attention.
What’s Changing
Behind Warren’s concerns lies a fundamental shift in how Google Search operates.
Google users can now buy items from Etsy and Wayfair within the Gemini chatbot and AI Mode in Search without leaving the interface. The Universal Commerce Protocol (UCP) checkout powers these direct purchases, with Shopify, Target, and Walmart integrations coming soon.
Beyond checkout integration, Google is changing how products appear in search results. A new feature called Direct Offers lets brands offer discounts directly within AI Mode search results and chat responses.
Google vice president Vidhya Srinivasan said the company is “reinventing what an ad is” rather than simply adding ads to AI experiences. Instead of traditional blue links, products now appear as interactive shopping cards with pricing, reviews, and checkout options embedded in AI responses.
The shift from links to embedded transactions fundamentally alters Google’s role from information broker to transaction intermediary. This creates more direct revenue opportunities but also increases Google’s responsibility for purchase outcomes and merchant behavior.
The Monetization Race
This transformation reflects broader pressure across the AI industry.
Google’s push comes as tech giants face pressure to justify substantial AI investments. The infrastructure spending creates urgent needs for revenue streams beyond traditional advertising.
OpenAI recently just started testing ads in ChatGPT in the US. Meanwhile, both ChatGPT and Perplexity have introduced shopping features designed to change how people discover and buy products online.
Yet Google positions its approach as solving consumer problems rather than merely generating revenue. Google claims the AI shopping experience eliminates the consumer dilemma between fast but risky purchases and time-consuming research.
The parallel movement toward commerce features across competing AI platforms indicates systematic pressure to monetize conversational interfaces before user habits solidify. Google’s advantage in merchant relationships and payment infrastructure positions it ahead of pure-AI competitors, though the company faces the challenge of preserving search neutrality perceptions while embedding commercial transactions.
How It Works
The technical architecture supporting this vision centers on standardization.
The Universal Commerce Protocol standardizes payments and digital identity verification across participating merchants. Google partnered with Shopify, Target, and Walmart to create a system where consumers complete purchases without repeatedly entering payment and shipping information.
The protocol envisions extending far beyond retail to services, subscriptions, and digital goods. Google positions UCP as foundational infrastructure for agentic commerce.
Google prohibits merchants from showing higher prices on Google than on their own websites, addressing price manipulation concerns. The protocol’s price parity rules position Google as a platform operator rather than a price-setting intermediary, potentially addressing regulatory concerns.
However, the company’s control over which merchants appear in AI responses and how prominently creates influence over commerce flows that extends beyond traditional search rankings.
What Comes Next
Despite these safeguards, regulatory questions remain unresolved.
Google previously deployed AI shopping agents that could call stores and complete purchases, and now describes agentic commerce as an established reality in 2026 that will transform shopping from discovery through purchase.
The company positions AI shopping as the next evolution in e-commerce, where conversational interfaces replace traditional search result pages.
Warren’s concerns remain unaddressed. The senator’s letter calls for Google to provide detailed answers about data collection practices, how AI recommendations prioritize products, and whether partners receive preferential treatment in shopping suggestions.
For merchants considering Universal Commerce Protocol integration, Warren’s unanswered questions create timing uncertainty. The gap between Google’s aggressive expansion timeline and pending regulatory scrutiny could determine whether the platform reaches sufficient scale to justify integration costs before potential policy interventions reshape the offering.


