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Google Opens Document Editing To Users Without a Google Account (zdnet.com) 25

Google has listened to user feedback and is currently testing a feature that will let G Suite users invite non-Google account holders to view, comment, suggest edits, and even directly edit Google Docs, Sheets, and Slides files. From a report: This wasn't possible until now, and G Suite users could only share documents and request feedback from users that owned a Google account. The way this new feature will work is via PINs (Personal Identification Numbers). Google said that G Suite users would be able to invite a non-Google user to view or edit a document via email. The said email would contain a link to the shared document. Non-Google users will be able to access the link and request an PIN that it would be delivered via a second email. Once they enter the PIN code, users can then view or edit the shared file -based on the assigned permissions.
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Google Opens Document Editing To Users Without a Google Account

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  • ...Google overlords. You are truly kind and fair rulers. Here, let me give you some more of my personal data." - Average Internet User
  • by rl117 ( 110595 ) <{ten.erbiledoc} {ta} {hgielr}> on Tuesday December 18, 2018 @03:45PM (#57826274) Homepage
    So, what they are really saying is that their illicit tracking is so effective that they already know who you are without an account.
  • by Xylantiel ( 177496 ) on Tuesday December 18, 2018 @04:04PM (#57826386)

    You can already make a document publicly editable and only give the url to who you want to edit it. They don't need a google account to edit it. (Whoever wrote the headline and summary is apparently so trapped in the googleverse that they don't know this.) This sounds like it allows you to assign permissions individually by email address and then each person is given a separate PIN.

    The difference between google tracking your email and a google account are pretty slim I think. However this kind of functionality has use cases where you want to give one person edit permissions and another view permissions but don't want to have a long-term connection to their google account. (e.g. transactional business clients)

    Now the problem with the protocol described in the summary is that google will certainly track email addresses across usages. If they weren't they would have implemented this as being able to generate multiple document "passwords" and being able to assign permissions to each. Then you could distribute those document passwords without giving the client's email address to google.

    • >"ow the problem with the protocol described in the summary is that google will certainly track email addresses across usages. If they weren't they would have implemented this as being able to generate multiple document "passwords" and being able to assign permissions to each. Then you could distribute those document passwords without giving the client's email address to google."

      +1 Insightful/Bingo.

      This is just a way that Google can collect non-Google Email address and track non-G-verse users even more.

    • Finally! I can give Google my personal information without having to give those bastards my email address.

  • Hey Google why don't you just start packet-sniffing everything like the CIA/NSA/FBI/whoever does and cut out all this shit in the middle? It's clear you want ALL THE DATA, so just save yourself the trouble and cut to the chase.
  • Do you have to accept Google ToS when you edit as a guest?

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