Your Unused Gmail Account May Be Permanently Deleted Friday (wsj.com) 82
Google will start to sweep away cobweb-collecting Gmail accounts this week. If you have an email address you haven't touched in a couple of years, it might soon be gone. From a report: The tech giant on Friday will start deleting personal Google accounts that have remained inactive for at least two years -- and going forward, it will continue killing accounts that reach two years of disuse. Once deleted, the accounts and any items in them can't be recovered. This could mean the end of personal emails, cherished documents and candid photos and videos tucked away in old Gmail accounts, Google Drives and other nooks in Google's servers.
What did you expect? (Score:3)
Nobody needs your stash of porn from 2003, Stormy Daniels is a grandma now.
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Hey, hey, whoa! GILF porn is a thing these days!
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Dude, it's Google Storage, not Dorian Gray's picture ;-)
Your porn stash is ageless :-)
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You can take my gilf porn from my cold dead hands, pal!
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Nobody needs your stash of porn from 2003, Stormy Daniels is a grandma now.
She still looks young in my porn stash. If you're beating off to porn imagining that person was here now looking like a normal person in your life you're doing porn very VERY wrong.
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I never had a "porn stash", and yeah, all my sex partners are aging normally. Real life is a thing, man.
What's considered use? (Score:4, Interesting)
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Login once every 18 months and they'll be fine.
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I have several family members that only have a Gmail account because they need it for an Android phone or signing in to chrome to keep their favorites. However they've not ever used that e-mail for anything and use yahoo or something else instead.
Don't know that this will work to keep the account, but the only access I have on my Gmail account is it's set up in my mail clients to log in and check it. About there times a year I get nag mails from them asking me to provide a cell phone number, but other than that I don't think I've ever used it. I'd say toss it on as a secondary account on their email client and just let it sit in the background to see. Can't hurt anything.
Re:What's considered use? (Score:5, Informative)
Google's help article isn't all that clear: https://support.google.com/acc... [google.com]
However, if they have it on their Android device then they should get multiple warnings - emails, notifications, even SMS if they have a phone number on file.
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If it's linked to your Android / Chrome instance you are in fact using the account.
From Google's Account policy (Score:2)
You should be fine:
"How Google defines activity
A Google Account that is in use is considered active. Activity might include these actions you take when you sign in or while you’re signed in to your Google Account:
Reading or sending an email
Using Google Drive
Watching a YouTube video
Sharing a photo
Downloading an app
Using Google Search
Using Sign in with Google to sign in to a third-party app or service"
Basically the act of having your google account on an Android phone achieves the "Downloading an app" t
Re:come on this the nerds of nerds site (Score:4, Insightful)
Ugh. I stopped running mine 15 years ago. I don't want to run my own email any more than I want to scrub my own toilets.
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Ugh. I stopped running mine 15 years ago. I don't want to run my own email any more than I want to scrub my own toilets.
This is a good analogy, but only if we point out that the guy scrubbing your toilets (Gmail) is analyzing all your turds and then trying to make money by selling information about your turds to advertisers.
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you're and you're
For a supposed nerd, it's lame how you don't know the difference.
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you're and you're
For a supposed nerd, it's lame how you don't know the difference.
O I no the difference.
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I mean he has no capitals, nor a full stop in his post. The sentence isn't only poorly written, it's not even actually a sentence.
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really i have been on /. for 25 years but i am a troll
yea ok
Re:come on this the nerds of nerds site (Score:4, Insightful)
if your not running your own email server your just lame
As someone who has setup and ran hundreds of mail servers, it makes very little sense for the average person to run their own mail server.
Gmail is free. Gmail for business is $72/year and is on the high end. There are plenty of companies like zoho and many domain
registars that offer free custom domain hosting. Spam is an arms race and it makes no sense for the average person to spend
the hours needed to maintain a mail server especially someone who would be affected by this policy of being deleted after 2 years of inactivity.
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I'd sooner be considered lame for not doing something highly technical and unique that virtually no one on the planet does, than be considered lame for my inability to spell or use basic primary school grammar.
Your sentence is 11 words long and has 5 mistakes in it. "Lame" is looking like you never finished primary school.
My Awesome Gmail Account (Score:5, Interesting)
(Complete tangent)
I have a great gmail address. It's actually my first and last name (with a period between them, but gmail ignores periods). No numeric extension or weirdness. I got it during the invitation-only period way back in the day.
But... I've discovered what others have also seen. If you have such an email, it's almost completely unusable. You get the email of other people routinely. I'm tracking the lives of at least three people. I know which lawyers they deal with, when they get their car serviced, what their flight itineraries look like... I know who they follow and how they vote. I know when they've had contractors work on their property, and what they had done. I know when their families meet for gatherings. I know when at least one went to an expensive rehab facility.
john.smith2231@gmail.com becomes, through errors, john.smith@gmail.com - either because of uncertainty on the part of the sender, or laziness and lack of care on the part of the owner. It's easier to wave your hand at the email address you gave toyota if you don't care about an invoice arriving. Other people's traffic in this account is vastly heavier than my own. In fact, I can't use it for anything else. It's flooded with opt-in and more appears daily.
So I might let it die and have it garbage collected by Google. That's a shame...
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Because of this article I just logged into the gmail account associated with the Google account that I use for YouTube. I don't use that email address for pretty much anything at all, except if there's some action I need to take on a couple of rarely updated YouTube channels that I have.
Lo and behold, I had an email from a recruiter sent to that address recently. Again, I never use that email address for anything, personal or work related. So I've certainly never provided that address on LinkedIn, or used i
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I have this happen all the time. I have first initial and full last name and get all emails for anyone whose name starts with d and ends with broome
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I have a 7 character account that don't start with a common name so I have yet to see a mail intended for someone else. I have had it for many years now.
Since 2015 there are 5 mails in my junk mail bin managed by Thunderbird.
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Me too. I must know every s*** r*** on the planet by now, including the one in Australia who is checking out assisted living communities . If it looks like an important email from a real human I'll let them know they have the wrong address if I feel public spirited.
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Have you ever considered doing a "Are you Dave Gorman" [wikipedia.org]? The good is quite entertaining.
Re: My Awesome Gmail Account (Score:2)
S/good/book/g
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I was also lucky early days to have an invite
I rememember buying an invite on ebay for 99 cents :)
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I was also lucky early days to have an invite
I rememember buying an invite on ebay for 99 cents :)
How any bitcoins was that, about 3? ;-)
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Me too, and I have a common name. It's very entertaining. For years some woman's security system told me her address, when she came and went and when she went to bed and woke up. I tried to tell Nancy, but the messages came from a do not reply account and e-mailing the company got no response.
Then there was the time some shady real estate development company shared their dropbox with me.
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I used to get email for someone else, but itt's not gmail though. I think either he intentionally gives wrong email out when an email address is required, or he is just goofing up badly. It just happens. Gmail just happens to be used by a lot of people so it probably crops up more.
Gmail probably gets immense loads of spam. So many spammers just try variations of names.
2 years? (Score:2)
In control (Score:3)
Doing the same. (Score:3)
Honestly, it's a hassle running and securing an email and web server, but it is really the only way to retain some kind of control.
This is relative control, as I'm hosted on a large provider's infrastructure, which is the only relatively cost-effective way to maintain email sender reputation.
I can create new fake email addresses on the fly for businesses I want to explore, then nuke all incoming email for that address whenever I want.
I can stop the flow of spam and phishing in whatever way I deem fit, with
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I run my own email too. It's not that hard... just make sure you pick a reputable hosting provide to ensure the IP has a decent (or at least neutral) reputation. Set up SPF and DKIM according to best practices and you should be OK. The initial setup took me a few hours total, I guess, but I haven't touched it in years.
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No. Different people have different geek specialties, and not all of us are good at setting up servers, just as not all of us are skilled at network security or encryption. I've known and worked with people who were very good at troubleshooting network connectivity issues but couldn't set up an email account without at least three tries, even with an accurate cheat sheet. It happens, and calling somebody inadequate because they can't wrap their mind around one or an
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Well, perhaps this, or in my experience, there are a lot of choices of mailers, a lot of choices of mailbox front-ends, a lot of choices of webmail, and they all have different docs.
In addition, there are multiple choices of setups for these emailers (one example: simple email accounts set up in files, vs. mysql backend).
Then there are personal choices like mariadb vs. mysql - and perhaps in someone's online recipe they use everything you want except mariadb, or they're using a few versions earlier than cur
Definition of inactive (Score:5, Informative)
Important: It doesn't look like logging in is sufficient. [google.com]
According to the linked info, you probably ought to send or receive an email, just to be safe...
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Phone requirement (Score:2)
I couldn't log in to my old Google accounts because they now require adding a phone number even for accounts created without one. I'm not giving them that - I'd rather just loose the account. I only used it for Google Talk (XMPP), and they screwed that up so I couldn't use it any more close to a decade ago.
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How to check your activity status
If you're not sure whether your Google Account is inactive, sign in to your Google Account.
Translation: (Score:4, Insightful)
you're not enough of a customer for us. Buh-bye.
Re:Translation: (Score:5, Insightful)
you're not enough of a customer for us. Buh-bye.
"Customers", generally pay for service.
Those that pay nothing, are known as the Product.
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We do pay for the service, with our time, attention, and private data.
The right to be forgotten (Score:1)
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Second of all, what makes you think that Google will actually delete those emails so Google itself cannot access them? Sure Google will be glad to "delete" the data so you can't see it in the UI, but from their treasure trove of storage (probably in the USA where laws like GDPR have no hope of forcing compliance)? Hell no. That data from 2004 will be bought and sold on the info broker market and there
Self-hosting a read-only server? (Score:3)
The main reason I have multiple emails is for different website types and sign-ups. It seems like a self-hosted read-only email server wouldn't be too difficult to get running and being marked as spam would be a non-issue. Then I could just have one or two Gmail accounts specifically for sending. Has anyone gone this route? How hard is it to secure a setup like this against intrusion? I wouldn't want to make my home network a target.
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Or just delegate to somebody like Fastmail for $5/month or Proton Mail? Although I do wonder whether mail service provider email aliases are less popular these days now that Apple has the "hide my email" feature feature integrated in to all of their OSes, browsers and other applications.
Requires thought, but not overly difficult (Score:2)
I run my own mail server that serves a few domains. I use postfix (MTA, SMTP), Dovecot (MDA, IMAP, POP3), Horde (web mail, contacts, calendars), OpenDKIM, spfmilter, SpamAssassin and BIND. MariaDB hosts the databases for both mail authentication and all the stuff Horde wants. I use Dovecot's replication over SSH to keep a live remote backup of the mailboxes.
Key things to keep in mind:
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Have you bothered trying to setup an end-to-end encrypted mail system (or at least encrypt your mail service relay)?
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OK, there are two things here: transport encryption, and mail content encryption (end-to-end encryption).
Transport encryption is mandatory. If your MTA doesn't support STARTTLS "opportunistic encryption" and use a TLS certificate signed by a recognised CA, you'll end up with mail not being delivered in both directions. You can use free Let's Encrypt certificates, just remember they need to be renewed every 90 days. The certificate usually doesn't need to be a perfect match for the host name, but the doma
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Thanks! (I never have moderation points when I need them...)
test it (Score:1)
Spam Accounts (Score:2)
I would guess that these are mostly spam accounts that were used briefly to send large amounts of spam emails then abandoned.
Accounts parents created for kids (Score:2)
I would guess that these are mostly spam accounts that were used briefly to send large amounts of spam emails then abandoned.
Accounts parents created for kids to register them for something. Been there, done that. Kids given control of accounts at 18 and never used. Hope accounts aren't used on bank accounts.
My Use (Score:3)
This is so f. up (Score:2)
Re: This is so f. up (Score:2)
You can send a subpoena to any google office. Most would send it to their HQ to guarantee it gets addressed, but for some they would send the subpoena to a rarely used satellite office in hopes the document never makes it to legal and you get a default judgement (I know someone who sued a Fortune 500 and sent the notice to an understaffed mall outlet location and they never responded)
Your aunt who is a lawyer should already know this. She is a lawyer, right?
Nothing I can do about it (Score:5, Interesting)
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Facebook did the same to me. Nothing of value was lost :-)
Who wants to make a bet (Score:2)
Google Voice (Score:3)
They're doing the same thing with Google Voice numbers. I get email every couple of months telling me I need to place calls with it or they'll take it away from me. So, I log in, make one phone call, and forget it until the next email. Damn it, Google, I use this number for *incoming* calls. There's no real reason why I'd ever use it for placing calls without your constant threats.
Seems like Google is trying to make every service that doesn't directly make them cash just as miserable to use as possible to drive existing users away.
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Seems like Google is trying to make every service that doesn't directly make them cash just as miserable to use as possible to drive existing users away.
Yep. This all began when they took down their big sign that said "don't be evil." I have no idea why anyone trusts these pricks with anything in 2023.
Customer (Score:2)
If you're not paying for the service, you are the product, not the customer.