Google officially rolled out end-to-end encrypted emails to all enterprise users this week. Free users have options to send secure emails too, however.
You can now send fully encrypted emails from Gmail to recipients on Outlook or any other third-party email provider.
Google is citing security for the move, which takes effect on Jan. 1. However, Gmail will still support third-party email accounts via the IMAP standard.
If your regular Google password doesn't work for syncing Gmail accounts, visit https://myaccount.google.com/apppasswords to create an app password. Simply create a name for the password -- I used ...
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Alert for Gmail users: Disable this Google Calendar setting immediately, or you'll be at risk.
A flaw in Google Calendar linked to Gmail's default settings could put your personal information at risk. Learn how to protect yourself from this cyberattack. 2.5 billion Gmail users are facing a ...
End-to-end encryption (E2EE) is the gold standard for secure communication, ensuring that only the sender and the intended recipient can ever read a message. But for email, implementing it has always ...
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