The terms of service changed have been reveled for Google's Gmail. People are not happy with what the terms of service have to offer, and are primarily frustrated with the email scanning aspect of the TOS. This means that Gmail users must reveal the contents of their email and allow Google to scan them for their now personal use. The company claims that they will not put anyone's information at risk. People simply do not want their information looked at an analyzed. It's not the first thing people want to be analyzed by a company, and many wish it was not included in the TOS.
The truth is people like to use Gmail. This is why the new TOS has frustrated so many. There are a lot of users who feel like they are being cheated from using a valuable form of email. People have a problem with freely sharing all of their information with a company that they feel is going to use the information to sell to other companies that plan to market to them.
The update appears to stem from a California judge questioning the clarity of informed consent. She stated that the terms of service at the time did not go far enough to garner an informed consent from Gmail users.
Some aspects of this new TOS are a bit more unsettling. If you read closer you will learn that anything you store on Google servers or any content you upload gives Google a worldwide license to use that content how they see fit. Supposedly all this content is done by machines and no humans actually review it.
While Google's new TOS raises some huge concerns, will it be enough to stop people from using Gmail? Only time will tell. In the meantime, if you continue to use the service be careful what you do with it.
Google has updated the TOS for Gmail to highlight what is looked for when the automated system scans incoming and outgoing emails, and explains the analysis in depth so that there can be no further confusion. Matt Kallman, a spokesman for Google, says that he hopes that the updated TOS will give users better clarity over how the system works. Google emphasizes that the analysis is automated and that it is used only to provide "personally relevant product features". The data is not stored for any other purpose.
The truth is people like to use Gmail. This is why the new TOS has frustrated so many. There are a lot of users who feel like they are being cheated from using a valuable form of email. People have a problem with freely sharing all of their information with a company that they feel is going to use the information to sell to other companies that plan to market to them.
The update appears to stem from a California judge questioning the clarity of informed consent. She stated that the terms of service at the time did not go far enough to garner an informed consent from Gmail users.
Some aspects of this new TOS are a bit more unsettling. If you read closer you will learn that anything you store on Google servers or any content you upload gives Google a worldwide license to use that content how they see fit. Supposedly all this content is done by machines and no humans actually review it.
While Google's new TOS raises some huge concerns, will it be enough to stop people from using Gmail? Only time will tell. In the meantime, if you continue to use the service be careful what you do with it.
Google has updated the TOS for Gmail to highlight what is looked for when the automated system scans incoming and outgoing emails, and explains the analysis in depth so that there can be no further confusion. Matt Kallman, a spokesman for Google, says that he hopes that the updated TOS will give users better clarity over how the system works. Google emphasizes that the analysis is automated and that it is used only to provide "personally relevant product features". The data is not stored for any other purpose.
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