Gmail's "Undo Send" feature allows users to cancel emails shortly after sending, preventing mistakes. This guide explains how to use the feature on desktop and mobile, and how to extend the ...
Viral posts claim you need to opt out of Gmail’s ‘smart features’ to avoid having your emails used to train AI, but Google says it doesn’t use the content of your emails for AI training. Viral posts ...
Google says the claims about training Gemini AI with users' emails from Gmail are false. Credit: Mustafa Hatipoglu/Anadolu via Getty Images You may have seen the now-viral warnings that Google is ...
Connecting the dots: Gmail users who are concerned about how Google handles their data should look for the toggles for smart features in the settings menu. The fine print states that the AI ...
While Google disagrees, the company may have decided again that your data is its toy. Here's how to try to stop Gmail from training its AI on your email. There's no shortage of big tech companies that ...
Amazon, Google, and Microsoft are creating exact replicas of popular web platforms to train AI agents to navigate the digital ...
Gmail users have been warned they should opt out of a new feature on the platform if they do not want their personal data to be used "to train AI models." In a viral post on social media platform X ...
Google denies charges that it's analyzing your private emails to train its AIs. A class action lawsuit accuses Google of privacy violations. You may still want to opt out of the features in question.
Google is pushing back on viral social media posts and articles like this one by Malwarebytes, claiming Google has changed its policy to use your Gmail messages and attachments to train AI models, and ...
Google would like you to know that no one is reading your emails on Gmail without your permission. While that may be true, things aren't that simple. The post, signed ...
Perhaps it's the focus on empathy and connecting with our subscribers on a human level. Or all of the emphasis on writing in plain English—using colloquialisms, sentence fragments, emojis, and even ...