Queen_Dopplepopolis
First Post
I guess I just don't find those aspects of Gmail that worrying... but, I guess, I don't have anything to hide... so, just never seemed like a big deal to me.
RangerWickett said:You misread me. I wasn't saying I pay for Gmail. I'm saying that, just like all other web searches, google is free. So, um, if google is free, that makes me think they shouldn't be making money. It'd be like if I saw the Red Cross being traded publicly on the New York Stock Exchange. I'm so used to it being free, I can't fathom what they think people will want to pay for.
Queen_Dopplepopolis said:I guess I just don't find those aspects of Gmail that worrying... but, I guess, I don't have anything to hide... so, just never seemed like a big deal to me.
RangerWickett said:You misread me. I wasn't saying I pay for Gmail. I'm saying that, just like all other web searches, google is free. So, um, if google is free, that makes me think they shouldn't be making money. It'd be like if I saw the Red Cross being traded publicly on the New York Stock Exchange. I'm so used to it being free, I can't fathom what they think people will want to pay for.
berdoingg said:I'm about three months into using Gmail and it works really well. I've got a few invites left if anyone wants one.
It would be daft to expect that Google are doing this out of the kindness of their hearts, but they're certainly not going to be any more power hungry or money grabbing than the owners of Hotmail, for example.
I like the way you can organise your mail by conversation, and apply labels to emails for archiving. It's really clever. Plus in the three months I've been using it I'm only up to 2% of my limit and haven't deleted a thing.
I guess the real lesson is that if it's important you should keep a backup. *sets off hypocrisy alarm*
Key word here is automated. It is not done by a human. You mail processed, key terms picked out, and ads displayed. Processing your mail word-by-word and picking stuff out is something all mail servers do, anyhow; especially if you have Bayesian spam filtering.BelenUmeria said:Automated searching of your personal mail to match you to a product and provide advertising.
All ISP's can and do read your personal e-mail. That t-shirt at ThinkGeek.com that says, "I read your e-mail" is only half-joking. If it makes you feel better, the hundreds of thousands of people who use GMail decrease the likelihood that your e-mail is being randomly snooped and read. As for making your e-mail available to the Feds; the Patriot Act requires them to.BelenUmeria said:Google retains the right to read your personal e-mail and may report suspicious activity to the government via the Patriot Act.
This is standard industry practice, believe it or not. The moral? If you have anything really important to say, say it in person.BelenUmeria said:Google retains all your personal mail even should you delete your account, they get to keep your private e-mail for as long as they want to keep it on the hard drive.
Nobody reads your email in gmail. It's automated. Since Google made a big deal about it, if they ever got caught having people read through the email, it would kill their business, which is very large and profitable.BelenUmeria said:It's not a matter of having something to hide. I have no desire for other people to read communications between family and friends. No one but my wife should read what I write her etc.
Hotmail Terms of Use said:The MSN Sites/Services may contain e-mail services, bulletin board services, chat areas, news groups, forums, communities, personal web pages, calendars, photo albums, file cabinets and/or other message or communication facilities designed to enable you to communicate with others (collectively, "Communication Services").
Hotmail Terms of Use said:Microsoft has no obligation to monitor the Communication Services. However, Microsoft reserves the right to review materials posted to a Communication Service and to remove any materials in its sole discretion. Microsoft reserves the right to terminate your access to any or all of the Communication Services at any time, without notice, for any reason whatsoever.
Microsoft reserves the right at all times to disclose any information as Microsoft deems necessary to satisfy any applicable law, regulation, legal process or governmental request, or to edit, refuse to post or to remove any information or materials, in whole or in part, in Microsoft's sole discretion.