Google will delete accounts older than two years to help avoid security risks, the company announced Tuesday.
The tech giant said neglected accounts are more likely to use old or repeated passwords and less likely to have two-step authentication enabled and to do security checks on the account.
"Meaning, these accounts are often vulnerable, and once an account is compromised, it can be used for anything from identity theft to a vector for unwanted or even malicious content, like spam," said Ruth Kricheli, Google's vice president of product management.
Deleted accounts would wipe out data across Gmail, Google Drive and Docs, Google Photos, Google Calendar and YouTube.
The policy applies to personal Google accounts, not business or school-associated ones.
Google said it will send several notices to inactive accounts and to recovery emails associated with those accounts. The deletions will start in December at the earliest, and accounts that were created and never used again will be removed first, Kricheli said.
To keep an account active, a user simply has to log in. This includes logins to third-party websites and apps.
2024-11-24 17:322641 view
2024-11-24 17:081855 view
2024-11-24 16:502616 view
2024-11-24 16:43116 view
2024-11-24 16:39199 view
2024-11-24 16:36232 view
For Teddi Mellencamp, cancer has taught her to be more than skin deep.Especially when it comes to re
The Justice Department asked a federal judge Friday to delay the trial of former President Donald Tr
The U.S. is in the midst of a drug crisis, with opioid overdose deaths climbing to epidemic proporti