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The limit was doubled to two gigabytes of storage on April 1, 2005, the first anniversary of Gmail. Georges Harik, the product management director for Gmail, stated that Google would "keep giving people more space forever." [8] In October 2007, Gmail increased storage to 4 gigabytes, after recent changes from competitors Yahoo and Microsoft. [9]
As an example, when Google's Gmail service increased its arbitrary limit to 25MB it warned that: "you may not be able to send larger attachments to contacts who use other email services with smaller attachment limits". [11] [12] Also note that all these size limits are based, not on the original file size, but the MIME-encoded copy.
Google Photos service will drop unlimited storage for photos and videos June 1. Uploads after that will use the 15GB it offers for free.
Google Photos is a photo sharing and storage service developed by Google.It was announced in May 2015 and spun off from Google+, the company's former social network.. Google Photos shares the 15 gigabytes of free storage space with other Google services, such as Google Drive and Gmail.
In May 2013, Google announced the overall merge of storage across Gmail, Google Drive and Google+ Photos, giving users 15 GB of unified free storage between the services. [57] In March 2014, the storage plans were revised again and prices were reduced by 80% to $1.99/month for 100 GB, $9.99/month for 1 TB, and $99.99/month for 10 TB. [58]
Gmail allows users to conduct advanced searches using either the Advanced Search interface or through search operators in the search box. Emails can be searched by their text; by their ‘From’, ‘To’ and ‘Subject’ fields, by their location, date and size; by associated labels, categories and circles, by whether or not the message is read, and by whether or not the message has an ...
A Google spokesperson stated to the media on August 15, 2013, that the corporation takes the privacy and security concerns of Gmail users "very seriously." [39] A Federal Judge declined to dissolve a lawsuit made by Gmail users who opposed to the use of analyzing the content of the messenger by selling byproducts. [40]
Say so long to your old Google (GOOG, GOOGL) account. Beginning on Dec. 1, the tech giant will begin purging all accounts that have been inactive for two years or more.