Gmail
History, & Facts
Gmail, free e-mail service offered by the American search engine company Google Inc. Google began offering Web-based e-mail accounts to select beta testers in 2004.
Gmail was opened to the general public in 2007 and, when first launched, offered an unprecedented one gigabyte of free e-mail storage space, much more than other competing services such as Microsoft’s Hotmail and Yahoo Mail, though users were also presented with advertisements based on keywords Google found in their messages. Google has regularly expanded the amount of free storage space given to users, which was 15 gigabytes (shared among Gmail, Google Drive, and Google Photos) beginning in 2013, and allows users to rent additional space up to two terabytes. In 2007 Google acquired Postini, an e-mail security firm, for $625 million in order to improve Gmail’s security, especially in Google’s efforts to sign up businesses.
Since its founding, one of Gmail’s most appealing features has been that it is Web-based, so users can access their e-mail from a computer, a smartphone, or any other Internet-enabled device. Also, Gmail gives users an e-mail address that is independent of any particular Internet service provider (ISP), which makes it easier to maintain a permanent address. Other features include conversation view, in which replies to the same message are displayed in a single group, and integrated text and video chat. In February 2010 Google incorporated a social networking application, called Buzz, into Gmail. Buzz allowed users to share updates and photos with contacts in their Gmail networks in a manner similar to Facebook or Twitter, but it was not restricted by the 140-character limit that defined Twitter. The service proved relatively unpopular, however, and was discontinued in late 2011.
In January 2010 Google announced that it had detected a series of sophisticated hacking attacks, originating in China, that were directed at the Gmail accounts of Chinese human rights activists and foreign journalists working in China. In some cases the accounts had been reconfigured to forward all incoming and outgoing e-mail to unfamiliar addresses. Google’s immediate response was to change Gmail’s protocol from the Web standard HTTP to the encrypted HTTPS, a move that increased security at the expense of speed.
Google announced in 2016 that Gmail had more than one billion active users every month. In 2017 Gmail added the Smart Reply feature, in which artificial intelligence uses machine learning to suggest replies to e-mails as the user types, making the composition of a reply much faster. That same year Google announced that it also used machine learning to identify spam and phishing e-mails with 99.9 percent accuracy and that it would stop scanning e-mails to deliver optimized advertisements. The next year Gmail added Smart Compose, which extended the capability of Smart Reply to the composition of new e-mails.
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