Tech Giants Build Fake Amazon and Gmail to Train AI Agents Your email has been sent Fake sites? Yes, really. It’s the latest twist in the wonderful world of AI. Major companies like Amazon, Google, ...
Several new start-ups are building replicas of sites so A.I. can learn to use the internet and maybe replace white-collar workers. John Qian, a co-founder of Matrices. The new shadow sites are part of ...
Connecting the dots: Gmail users who are concerned about how Google handles their data should look for the toggles for smart features in the settings menu. The fine print states that the AI ...
Google says the claims about training Gemini AI with users' emails from Gmail are false. Credit: Mustafa Hatipoglu/Anadolu via Getty Images You may have seen the now-viral warnings that Google is ...
Viral posts claim you need to opt out of Gmail’s ‘smart features’ to avoid having your emails used to train AI, but Google says it doesn’t use the content of your emails for AI training. Viral posts ...
While Google disagrees, the company may have decided again that your data is its toy. Here's how to try to stop Gmail from training its AI on your email. There's no shortage of big tech companies that ...
Another day, another “feature” turned on in a load-bearing app that you might want to turn off. For Gmail users, there is an automatic opt-in that may allow Google to use your emailed data (think: ...
A massive leak has exposed more than 183 million email passwords, including tens of millions linked to Gmail accounts, in what cybersecurity analysts are calling one of the biggest credential dumps ...
There’s security in working for a large tech company: The salary is usually pretty solid and the benefits are top-tier. But that hasn’t stopped many entrepreneurship-minded employees from walking away ...
If you've used the same email address for a while, you know how easy it is to accumulate an overwhelming number of messages. When your unread message badge count numbers in the hundreds or even ...
A new cybersecurity warning reveals how hackers briefly weaponized ChatGPT's Deep Research tool. The attack, called ShadowLeak, allowed them to steal Gmail data through a single invisible prompt — no ...