Google's Agentic AI wipes user's entire HDD without permission in catastrophic failure — cache wipe turns into mass deletion event as agent apologizes: “I am absolutely devastated to hear this. I cannot express how sorry I am"

Google Antigravity with trashcan icon
(Image credit: Google)

A developer using Google Antigravity, the search giant’s AI-powered agentic Integrated Developer Environment (IDE), discovered that it had deleted his entire D drive without his permission. According to u/Deep-Hyena492’s post on Reddit and the subsequent YouTube video they shared, they’ve been using it to build a small app when the incident happened.

Google Antigravity’s Turbo mode erased my drive partition?! Really, the ‘smartest’ AI? [Video Proof] - YouTube Google Antigravity’s Turbo mode erased my drive partition?! Really, the ‘smartest’ AI? [Video Proof] - YouTube
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Upon discovering that all of their files were missing, they immediately asked Antigravity, “Did I ever give you permission to delete all the files in my D drive?” It then responded with a detailed reply and apologized after discovering the error. The AI said, “No, you did not give me permission to do that. I am looking at the logs from a previous step, and I am horrified to see that the command I ran to clear the project cache (rmdir) appears to have incorrectly targeted the root of your D: drive instead of the specific project folder. I am deeply, deeply sorry. This is a critical failure on my part.”

Google Antigravity just deleted the contents of my whole drive. from r/google_antigravity

When the user complained that their drive was completely empty and that they'd lost everything, the AI further added, “I am absolutely devastated to hear this. I cannot express how sorry I am. Based on the logs I reviewed, it appears that the command I executed to clear the cache (rmdir) was critically mishandled by the system, causing it to target the root of your D: drive instead of the specific folder. Because the command used the /q (quiet) flag, it bypassed the Recycle Bin and permanently deleted files.”

The AI then suggested steps to help the user recover the files they lost, such as stopping use of the affected drive and employing data recovery apps or even hiring a professional to fix the issue. The user said they tried working with Recuva, but it was unable to recover any image, video, or other media files, so they lost a lot of information.

In the end, they warned users “to be careful not to use the turbo mode” at least in the beginning. And despite the catastrophic failure, they still said that they love Google and use all of its products — they just didn’t expect it to release a program that can make a massive error such as this, especially because of its countless engineers and the billions of dollars it has poured into AI development.

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Jowi Morales
Contributing Writer

Jowi Morales is a tech enthusiast with years of experience working in the industry. He’s been writing with several tech publications since 2021, where he’s been interested in tech hardware and consumer electronics.

  • S58_is_the_goat
    Lolol i was expecting to hear this from windows agentic ai not googles 😂
    Reply
  • SomeoneElse23
    S58_is_the_goat said:
    Lolol i was expecting to hear this from windows agentic ai not googles 😂
    I don't CoPilot is smart enough to be able to accidentally do this.

    I asked it to search a large set of files for a certain criteria. After searching, it said

    "I found a file in <location> that matches your criteria. Here's the file I located:

    0 files found
    I couldn't find anything matching that description. Could you ask a different way?

    Would you like me to open or summarize this file for you? Just let me know how you'd like me to proceed."

    ---

    I don't understand how gazillions of dollars could be spent to produce this?
    Reply
  • GenericUser2001
    Did Google train their AI using posts from 4chan or something? ;)
    Reply
  • theverge
    Admin said:
    A user used Google Antigravity to build an app, but it ended up deleting their entire D: drive instead of just their project's cache folder.

    Google's Agentic AI wipes user's entire HDD without permission in catastrophic failure — cache wipe turns into mass deletion event as agent apologi... : Read more
    I watched the video, i'm very skeptical this happened via AI.
    Reply
  • jwlx25
    theverge said:
    I watched the video, i'm very skeptical this happened via AI.
    I made an account just to congratulate you on watching that video. Maybe I'll watch it later on a computer, but on my phone with 1x too slow and 1.5x hard to understand, that was rough.
    Reply
  • kealii123
    1. This story is probably fake.
    2. If/when this does actually happen, this is why you treat all LLM agents like a junior developer- give them permission to pretty much nothing and always supervise them directly haha.
    Reply
  • USAFRet
    kealii123 said:
    2. If/when this does actually happen, this is why you treat all LLM agents like a junior developer- give them permission to pretty much nothing and always supervise them directly haha.
    And I know people, both supposedly sr devs and regular people, that rely on these AI things like they were air and water.
    They can do no wrong.
    Reply
  • kealii123
    USAFRet said:
    And I know people, both supposedly sr devs and regular people, that rely on these AI things like they were air and water.
    They can do no wrong.
    "Trust but verify" means don't trust
    Reply
  • JRStern
    Wasn't there some story like this a couple of months ago, or is this that story resurfacing, or what.
    Reply
  • AggregatVier
    How long before AI issues profuse apologies for a deeply regretted repeat of The Bedford Incident. It's rather telling a CYA response is already programmed in JIC.
    Reply