Google to stop scanning Gmail accounts
Silicon Valley giant Google said it will stop scanning its users’ personal email accounts to deliver targeted advertising.
Silicon Valley giant Google said it will stop scanning its users’ personal email accounts to deliver targeted advertising.
Peter Yates at Spark Ventures discusses how his experiences in consumption based IT services can be transposed to his new domain – operations.
Google has made an important change to its Gmail spam filter that is expected to make targeted phishing attacks more difficult while allowing for a more global webmail service.
The mounting pressure to move IT resources to the cloud has added a layer of complexity to the already complex job of a CIO.
In the age of Twitter, SMS and IM is email obsolete? Not yet. Like it or not, most of us gets dozens, even hundreds, of emails a day. Since that's the case, why not look for the easiest and least costly way to manage that flood of useful - and useless - information?
The hands-down answer to that question is the latest version of Mozilla Thunderbird, the open source email client brought to you by the same folks who develop and support Mozilla Firefox, the world's number two Web browser. Thunderbird does pretty much everything and then some that you can do with Yahoo mail or Gmail (with the exception of Google's new Buzz social networking tool) and lets you keep email on your own hard drive and under your own control.