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The first was a five-minute outage of every Google service in August 2013. The second was a 25-minute outage of Gmail, Google+, Google Calendar, and Google Docs in January 2014. The third was a YouTube outage in October 2018. The fourth was a Gmail/Google Drive outage in August 2020. The fifth, in November 2020, affected mainly YouTube, and the ...
Skiff was an email service startup company and collaboration tool, that provided privacy-friendly end-to-end encrypted Email and Cloud services. [1] [2] [3] The company's commercial strategy was focused in offering to its clients a Source-Available or Open-Source, transparent and audited Email, Calendar, and Cloud Storage services without trackers or advertisements.
Grasshopper – Shut down on June 15. [41] Google Now Launcher – Discontinued in May. [42] Jacquard – Shut down in April 24. Google Currents – internal enterprise communication tool, formerly Google+ for G Suite. Shut down on March, with users migrated to Spaces in Google Chat. [43] Google Street View (standalone app) – Shut down on ...
Google users in the U.S., Europe, India and other parts of the world were briefly unable to access their Gmail accounts, watch YouTube videos or get to their online documents during an outage Monday.
Jul. 31—Alaska telecommunications company GCI will end its longtime email service next year, a move that will affect many customers who must transition to new email providers. Spokespeople with ...
Postini, Inc. [1] was an e-mail, Web security, and archiving service owned by Google from 2007 until its closure . It provided cloud computing services for filtering e-mail spam and malware (before it was delivered to a client's mail server), offered optional e-mail archiving, and protected client networks from web-borne malware.
As far as the "most unsubscribed" companies, the top three were StumbleUpon (43%), Live Nation (38%), and Goodreads (35%). Twitter was the only company to make both lists, sending an average of ...
By early 2004, however, almost everybody at Google was using Gmail to access the company's internal email system. [3] Gmail was announced to the public by Google on 1 April 2004, after extensive rumors of its existence during testing. Owing to the April Fool's Day release, the company's press release aroused skepticism in the technology world ...