Let $K$ be a number field. Consider $X=\mathcal{M}(\mathcal O_K)$ the global Berkovich analytic space associated to $\mathcal O_K$ endowed with the norm $\|\cdot\|=\max\limits_{\sigma:K \hookrightarrow \Bbb C}|\sigma(\cdot)|$.
My very naïve and ignorant understanding is that one of the "selling points" of considering $X$ is that it incorporates both Archimedean and non-Archimedean information. Hence I would expect that the "correct" theory of étale cohomology for $X$ reflects this. There's already a variant of étale cohomology that is "sensitive to Archimedean information", namely the cohomology of the Artin–Verdier site as defined here. Therefore, I would expect étale cohomology of $X$ (whatever it is precisely) to be isomorphic to the cohomology of the Artin–Verdier site. However it, from looking at some sources on étale morphisms in the setting of global Berkovich geometry, it seems that there's a GAGA theorem of the sort that claims that étale cohomology of $X$ is just the étale cohomology of $\operatorname{Spec}(\mathcal O_K)$, which ignores ramification at infinity.
This has me confused. I guess on a more basic level, my question is related to the question: Does an extension of number fields that is ramified only at infinite places induce a ramified or an unramified morphism on analytic spectra?