It’s been less than two weeks since Google’s grand ‘Gemini for Home’ unveiling, and it looks like the AI integration is already resulting in some ‘hallucinations.’

For reference, earlier this month, the Mountain View, California-based tech giant finally replaced the ol’ trusty Google Assistant with Gemini’s AI smarts. As part of the rollout, Google Home users not only gained a more natural way to speak to their smart home devices, they also gained Ask Home, a new, natural language command center for the entire home, AI descriptions for their camera video history, and a Home Brief feature that essentially summarizes the entire day’s events into quick, digestable summaries. The latter is what’s seemingly broken for some Google Home users with Nest cameras and sensors.

“Home Brief cuts through all that noise for you. It automatically identifies the day’s important events and summarizes hours of footage into a quick, digestible summary delivered each evening with relevant video clips from that day’s events,” wrote Google in its recent blog post detailing upgrades coming to the Google Home app.

The base idea of the feature promises an effortless way to monitor your home, but early feedback, pointed out by Reddit users and highlighted by the folks over at Android Authority, suggests otherwise.

Google Home’s latest feature detects ghosts

The Home Brief summary above, shared by user Electric-Mouse30, doesn’t seem out of the blue at first. It logs details about people in the house walking into different rooms, sitting on the recliner, and later leaving the room. However, the user clarified that no one had been home for that entire 24-hour period, and that nothing appeared in said video footage, which means that the Gemini-powered Home Brief feature essentially hallucinated the activities that it logged.

Other users in the OP’s thread shared similar anecdotes. “My AI detects a dog being walked across the street as a person on my porch. Cameras in my house detect a car driving by at night with it’s lights on, as a person moving in the room,” wrote one user, while a different one said, “My Cameras think my cats are people.”

While the feature has been a miss for some, it has been a clear hit for others. Some users shared examples of highly accurate briefs, including the AI being able to highlight the make and model of cars that came and went by.

Got my first brief last night and it was spot on for the entire days events it recapped. Then it had the video clips underneath it that were related to the brief. Sucks yours was that off which is weird.

It’s worth noting that Google Home’s Gemini upgrades, including the Home Briefs feature, are part of an early access rollout. As is the case with said features, Google will likely incorporate user feedback over the coming weeks and months to improve the feature, leading to wider and general availability.