A new feature in Google's Gmail will result in some users receiving
messages from people with whom they have not shared their email
addresses, raising concerns among some privacy advocates. Photo/FILE
In Summary
- The change, which Google announced on Thursday, broadens the list of contacts available to Gmail users so it includes both the email addresses of their existing contacts, as well as the names of people on the Google+ social network.
- As a result, a person can send an email directly to friends, and strangers, who use Google+.
- Google said that users who did not wish to receive email messages from other people on Google+ could switch the settings so that they receive messages only from people they have added to their networks of friends or from no one at all.
A new feature in Google's Gmail will result in
some users receiving messages from people with whom they have not shared
their email addresses, raising concerns among some privacy advocates.
The change, which Google announced on Thursday,
broadens the list of contacts available to Gmail users so it includes
both the email addresses of their existing contacts, as well as the
names of people on the Google+ social network. As a result, a person can
send an email directly to friends, and strangers, who use Google+.
Google is increasingly trying to integrate its
Google+, a two-and-a-half-year old social network that has 540 million
active users, with its other services. When consumers sign up for Gmail,
the company's web-based email service, they are now automatically given
a Google+ account.
Google said the new feature will make it easier for people who use both services to communicate with their friends.
"Have you ever started typing an email to someone
only to realise halfway through the draft that you haven't actually
exchanged email addresses?" the company said in a blog post announcing
the feature. "You're in luck, because now it's easier for people using
Gmail and Google+ to connect over email."
Google said that users who did not wish to receive
email messages from other people on Google+ could switch the settings
so that they receive messages only from people they have added to their
networks of friends or from no one at all.
Some privacy advocates said Google should have
made the new feature "opt-in," meaning that users should explicitly
agree to receive messages from other Google+ users, rather than being
required to manually change the setting.
Marc Rotenberg, the executive director of non-profit Electronic Privacy Information Centre, called the new feature "troubling."
"There is a strong echo of the Google Buzz snafu,"
he said, referring to a social networking service that Google launched
in 2010. Buzz initially used its Gmail users' contact lists to create
social networks that the rest of the world could see, leading to an
uproar and ultimately a settlement with the US Federal Trade Commission.
Google said the new feature would not expose the email addresses of any Google+ users to strangers.
Emails from strangers on Google+ will be routed to
a special section within the recipients mailbox that is separate from
messages from friends and other contacts. If the recipient does not
reply to the message, Gmail will block any future messages from that
person.
A Google spokeswoman said the company planned to
send an email to all Google+ users during the next two days alerting
them to the change and explaining how to change their settings.
One exception to the new feature is celebrities on
Google+, who are followed by a large number of fans. According to the
spokeswoman, the Gmail accounts of such public figures will not
automatically receive emails from other Google+ users.
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