![]() ![]() Understand though, Gmail's use case is narrower than Docs, where people save lists, random snippets, quotations and copies of text from disparate sources. I'm a dev for a stats/survey company, so I can say what I'd want to see in terms of those kind of reports.įor Gmail, stats like that would be handy in determining what sort of correspondence is being written. It's obviously just supposition without any more specific per-product details of how data is studied internally, but I'd guess it varies a lot per product. Find my life's work compressed into an obscure captcha authentication, further training the AI to reduce us into the dust we may very well already be. if I put my precious small writings into a google doc for the sake of ease and comfort, they wouldn't scrape my meagre existence into a barely noticeable quantity of data. Now I'm scouring the internet for plausible deniability that maybe. ![]() Everything else: mandatory public record so that the AI can scrape as much information out of our day-to-day, keeping the algorithms as accurate as possible.īut what do I know? I use ODT and it just crashed on me and sent one of my files into an ASCII hashtag nightmare. "They could answer any question back then, and not be afraid of repercussions." they'll say in lecture halls reserved for elite private citizens who are still allowed to learn without integration. ![]() Historians will look through these pages to figure out how we thought about life, what we cared about, and what note-taking apps we wanted to use before google overlordTM made The-Drive compulsory in our mindsoft. Answers to questions long asked, scratched into perpetuity. The first time I saw the word 'decade' being used to describe a post on the yahoo answers pages (RIP) I realized how old the internet is actually becoming. I would never put 'real' confidential info online, especially not on Drive. I have stuff on my Google Drive that I consider private and assume no one is reading, but it's just junk I find handy to have access to from my various travels. If I were a lawyer, for instance, I would never put my client information on Google Drive. The good news is, generally no one who would be interested in your documents will get that aggregated information and suss you out.Īs wolfcry0 says, never assume anything you have online is private. If someone shares aggregated information, you can be identified with effort. My experience is that there is no such thing as non-personally identifiable aggregated informaiton. For example, we may share information publicly to show trends about the general use of our services. We may share aggregated, non-personally identifiable information publicly and with our partners – like publishers, advertisers or connected sites. Google's privacy policy says their robots scan your documents (and emails and everything else you create using Google, Chrome, and so on) not only to give you targeted ads, but RulesĢ) Use Reddiquette (aka don't be a dick).ģ) Submissions regarding individual help should be put in the support megathread.Ĥ) Google search glitches and amusing Google Assistant screenshots will be removed.ĥ) Please don't submit promo codes as a new submission.Īre you a Googler and want verified flair? Fill out this form and then send a modmail (note: you must be signed in under the domain). Please focus on community-oriented content, such as news and discussions, instead of individual-oriented content, such as questions and help. r/Google is for news, announcements and discussion related to all Google services and products. ![]()
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