Google has introduced a new end-to-end encryption (E2EE) feature in Gmail, enabling organizations to send encrypted emails that even Google cannot read to other Gmail users. Later this year, the ...
For its 21st birthday, Gmail wants to make sending end-to-end encrypted (E2EE) emails much easier for companies in regulated industries. The goal is to “enable enterprise users to send E2EE messages ...
Gmail is one of—if not the—most popular email platform in the world. But it's not the favorite for users who care about their privacy. Google doesn't offer end-to-end encryption (E2EE) for basic Gmail ...
Google has announced plans to make it easier for Google Workspace customers to send and receive encrypted emails to any recipient via Gmail without requiring a separate third-party provider. Gmail ...
The new feature is more accessible than S/MIME because it eliminates the need for certificate management. All enterprise users of Gmail can now easily apply end-to-end encryption to their emails.
The technical foundation is client-side encryption, which Google has been building into Workspace for several years across Drive, Docs, Sheets, Meet, and now Gmail. The key principle is key custody: ...
What just happened? Google is celebrating Gmail's 21st birthday by introducing new encryption features for enterprise users. The company's latest security system aims to simplify encryption options ...
Every webpage you visit is encrypted in transit, and you get a nasty error message if you go to a page that doesn't have the magic https leading off its URL. Your ...
Update: Republished on April 28 with new reports into soaring email attacks on mobile phone users and the deployment of AI to industrialize the threat. As an interesting week for Google comes to an ...
Android and iPhone consumers can now use E2EE in the app, but you need to be subscribed to Enterprise Plus. Alex Valdes from Bellevue, Washington has been pumping content into the Internet river for ...