Google may soon let users change their Gmail address
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Google just gave Gemini users a new vibe-coding tool
Google is turning Gemini into a place where you describe the “vibe” of an app and let the AI do the heavy lifting. The company’s new vibe-coding tool inside Google AI Studio promises to turn natural language into working mini‑apps,
Google Nest users in Canada will soon get access the Gemini for Home update. Read how this AI Google Assistant replacement works and how to join the early access program.
Earlier this month, when U.S. District Judge Amit Mehta issued penalties against Google for monopolizing the search engine market, he stopped short of the harshest ones — like forcing the breakup of the company. Instead, Mehta ordered Google to share ...
Google has been ordered to pay a $425 million fine following a privacy trial that found it collected user data even when tracking was disabled. The company plans to appeal the ruling, calling it a misunderstanding of how its products work. A lot of apps ...
Just six months after walking back another of its privacy focused changes, Google is once more making changes to how it handles private user data in Google Chrome and its related applications. The change in question includes the official death of Google's ...
Google is tracking your online behavior in the name of advertising, reintroducing a data collection process that ingests all of your online signals (from IP address to complex browser information) and pinpoints unique users or devices, also known as ...
Android is under attack. Google’s emergency update is now deploying across Samsung’s vast user base and you should install as soon as you can. This isn’t the only Android security update you need. But here there is bad news for most Galaxy users.
A study analyzing Google vs ChatGPT traffic finds Google keeps users on its site longer, but sends the most traffic overall. Data suggests that Google keeps users on its site longer by expanding its in-platform features. ChatGPT drives 2.3 times more ...
A federal jury ordered Google to pay $425.7 million for invading users' privacy by collecting data over an eight-year period on millions of people who had turned off a tracking feature in their Google account. The verdict on Wednesday in San Francisco ...