Google Messages Hack Bypasses Airplane Wi-Fi Fees—AI Works Offline Like Magic
No more begging the passenger next to you for the Delta Wi-Fi password. A sneaky workaround in Google Messages lets you access AI features mid-flight without paying a dime—because apparently even the skies aren’t free from Big Tech’s upsells.
How it works: The trick leverages RCS messaging protocols to process requests locally when offline, cutting out the middleman (and their $8/hour extortion). Suddenly, that ’free’ in-flight experience looks about as generous as a bank’s ’no-fee’ crypto trading promotion.
Pro tip: Try asking the AI to explain airline ancillary revenue models while you’re at it—just for the irony.

The trick worked because Gemini runs within Google Messages. If RCS messaging is allowed, as it often is, then its replies come through like regular chats.
“Having free access to Gemini in Google Messages felt like peeking through a window at the entire internet without actually opening a browser,” she said.
While El Khoury noted that Gemini could generate images, even over the slower in-flight connection, she was not able to open links and had to delete previous chats to see proper formatting, such as underlines and line breaks.
“It was all quite a fun and streamlined experiment, like talking to the world’s know-it-all nerd over text messages,” she said.
It’s not clear if these tricks work on iOS or how long this hack will remain viable, especially if airlines catch on—but for now, it’s a clever workaround for avoiding the sky-high cost of Wi-Fi at 30,000 feet.
Edited by Andrew Hayward