Tag Archives: Gmail

Google Sends 50,000 Warnings to Users Targeted by State Hackers

Photo: Kenzo Tribouillard / AFP (Getty Images)

If the internet is a digital Wild West, it’s time to lock your doors and close your windows. While the amount of cyber attackers and activity alone is alarming, in this episode, the featured villain is a hacker group backed by the Iranian government.

In a blog post published Thursday, Google’s Threat Analysis Group, also known as TAG, revealed that it had sent more than 50,000 warnings to users whose accounts had been targeted by government-backed hacker groups carrying out phishing and malware campaigns so far this year. Receiving a warning does not necessarily mean your Google account has been hacked—Google does manage to stop some of the attacks—but rather that the company has identified you as a target.

Google stated that this amounted to a nearly 33% increase when compared to the same time last year and attributed the activity to a large campaign launched by the Russian-sponsored group Fancy Bear, which U.S. and UK security agencies found had been on a worldwide password guessing spree since at least mid-2019, according to a report published in July.

Russia’s not alone though. More than 50 countries have hacker groups working “on any given day,” Google explained.

“We intentionally send these warnings in batches to all users who may be at risk, rather than at the moment we detect the threat itself, so that attackers cannot track our defense strategies,” Google said. “On any given day, TAG is tracking more than 270 targeted or government-backed attacker groups from more than 50 countries. This means that there is typically more than one threat actor behind the warnings.”

While that statistic alone is mind-boggling, the company also put a spotlight on APT35, a cyber attacker backed by Iran that has hijacked accounts, deployed malware, and spied on users using “novel techniques” in recent years. In particular, Google highlighted four of the “most notable” APT35 campaigns it’s disrupted in 2021.

One of APT35’s regular activities is phishing for credentials of so-called high-value accounts, or those belonging to people in government, academia, journalism, NGOs, foreign policy, and national security. The group uses a technique in which it compromises a legitimate website and then deploys a phishing kit.

In early 2021, Google said APT35 used this technique to hijack a website affiliated with a UK university. The hackers then wrote emails to users on Gmail, Hotmail, and Yahoo with an invitation link to a fake webinar and even sent second-factor identification codes to targets’ devices.

As you may be able to infer, legitimacy appears to be important to APT35, so it’s no surprise that another one of its trademarks is impersonating conference officials to carry out phishing attacks.

This year, members of APT35 pretended to be representatives from the Munich Security and the Think-20 Italy conferences, which are actually real events. After sending a non-malicious first contact email, APT35 sent users who responded follow-up emails with phishing links.

APT35 has also carried out its evil deeds via apps. In May 2020, it attempted to upload a fake VPN app to the Google Play Store that was in fact spyware and could steal users’ call logs, text messages, contacts, and location data. Google said it detected the app and removed it from the Play Store before anyone installed it but added that APT35 had tried to distribute this spyware on other platforms as recently as July.

The group even misused Telegram for its phishing attacks, leveraging the messaging app’s API to create a bot that notified it when a user loaded one of its phishing pages. This tactic allowed the group to obtain device-based data in real-time of the users on the phishing site, such as IP, useragent, and locales. Google said it had reported the bot to Telegram and that the messaging app had taken steps to remove it.

Hats off to Google for publishing this valuable information—knowledge is power, especially in cybersecurity—but dang is it nerve-racking. Let’s be clear, nobody is entirely safe online, but there are things you can do to reduce the possibilities of being hacked, such as enacting two-factor authentication and using a security key.

You can check out our full guide of safe online practices here, or just, you know, never use anything with a screen ever again. The guide is probably easier. Your call, though.

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Gmail for Android on Chrome OS updated with new app icon

On Chromebooks, you can access most Google services with either the website or the Android app. Google today updated Gmail for Android on Chrome OS with the latest Material You redesign, but more importantly the latest app icon.

Those that use the Gmail Android app on Chromebooks over the web client have been stuck with the pre-Workspace branding even as the four-colored logo widely rolled out on all other platforms last October. It was a peculiar decision that left users with the red-and-white icon in the shelf and app launcher. 

Version 2021.09.10.397347674 (from 2020.05.31.x) this afternoon introduces the new icon and brings Material You. There’s no change to the two or three-column, — depending on whether the navigation drawer is expanded — tablet UI. A blue accent, like on all other devices not running Android 12, is used for the label list, search field, and rounded square “Compose” FAB. Meanwhile, you can find pill-shaped icons throughout the app now.

With this update, Gmail still unfortunately does not have a dark theme toggle. As such, you’re stuck with a light UI across all Android apps that don’t have a manual setting, with Chromebooks not yet offering a proper dark look. Developers optimizing apps for Chrome OS would ideally always offer that option. 

Additionally, the integrated Chat, Spaces, and Meet is still not available when you install Gmail for Android on Chrome OS. It does not appear in settings as an option in to enable. As such, there’s no bottom bar when you shrink the app to a portrait-shaped window.

This new version of Gmail for Android with Material You and the new icon is rolling out via the Play Store this evening.

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Google’s Material You design is coming to Gmail, Calendar, and Docs on Android

Google is starting to roll out its new Material You design system to Gmail, Calendar, Docs, and more on Android. The new look will include changes to navigation bars, improved action buttons, and Google’s Sans text for better readability. It’s part of the bigger Android 12 redesign that includes big, bubbly buttons, shifting colors, smoother animations, and some overhauls to built-in apps.

The design changes mean Pixel devices with Android 12 or newer will be able to match the colors inside apps like Gmail, Google Meet, and Google Drive with their wallpapers for what Google calls a “more dynamic, personalized look.” Existing color schemes and color-coded file types and folders will remain unchanged within the apps, though.

The subtle changes to the Gmail app design.
Image: Google

Google is leaning in to more rounded corners.
Image: Google

The end result is subtle but colorful changes to apps like Gmail, Calendar, and Docs. Google has really leaned further into rounded corners here, and the changes are mostly aesthetic, meaning button placements and core navigation won’t be changing.

The design changes are already available in Gmail, Google Drive, Google Docs, Sheets, and Slides. They will also appear in Google Calendar on September 20th, and Google Meet on September 19th. All of the design changes are available to both personal Google accounts and Google Workspace customers.

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Google Signs Out Hangouts Users on Mobile in Chat Transition

Photo: Lionel Bonaventure / AFP (Getty Images)

It’s been nearly an entire year since we started talking about how Google Hangouts was officially set to disappear. Since then, it seems like we’ve been repeating the same thing every few months, only for Hangouts to stubbornly persist living. If apps could talk, Hangouts would probably declare, “what is dead may never die.” 

However, Google on Friday took one more slow step toward shutting off the lights at Hangouts for good. Spotted by 9to5Google, iOS and Android users with free personal accounts have begun seeing a banner that states that “Hangouts is being replaced by Google Chat.” (Google Chat is Google’s version of Slack, while Google Meet is its version of Zoom). Users also saw a “Learn more” button that takes them to a support article explaining the switch from Hangouts to Chat as well as a button to “Switch to Chat in Gmail.”

The outlet explains that clicking on the switch button will sign you out of the Hangouts mobile app, which means that you will no longer receive notifications from Hangouts or send messages with the app. Google also reminds users that their Hangouts conversations from the last year are already available in Chat, adding that older conversations will be available later on.

Mobile devices weren’t the only ones affected by this change. Google’s Hangouts website similarly began featuring a message saying, “It’s time to switch to Google Chat.” Users are then redirected to the Chat website.

Sounds like a solid step towards biting the dust, right? I thought so too but then was reminded that Hangouts never dies. According to 9to5Google, mobile users who aren’t ready to say goodbye to Hangouts—which seems odd considering how many times its demise has been mentioned in the media—can still use the app after Google signs them out. All they need to do is open the Hangouts app and add their account once more.

There is no official end date for Hangouts yet. The company says a “mandatory upgrade” for enterprise accounts will take place in late 2021, which is coming up soon, but no cutoff has been announced for users with free personal accounts.

Now, I don’t have anything against Hangouts. I’m just at the point where every time I see something related to it, I think: “Wait, that’s still around?” In fact, when Google really does pull the plug, I might ask someone to pinch me.

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6 Ways to Keep Your Gmail Storage Free and Under 15GB

Photo: Jarretera (Shutterstock)

The fastest way to clear space in Gmail is by deleting large emails. Although cloud storage services make it incredibly easy to upload and share files, many people (or companies) send large email attachments. Over time, you’ll be wondering where the 15GB of storage went and why you’re being prompted to buy more space.

If you’re in this position, a targeted strike at large attachments is the fastest way to free up space. We can use the size parameter to do that. In the search bar in Gmail, type: size:5m. This will reveal all emails taking up 5MB or more space in Gmail, which you can review to see how much you need them, select the ones you don’t, and delete them.

Similarly, you can try different terms such as size:1m for emails larger than 1MB or size:20m for emails larger than 20MB. The number before m signifies the number of megabytes you want to filter by, so you can change it according to your needs.

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1,000 new Google emoji coming to Gmail, Android 12

Ahead of World Emoji Day tomorrow, Google is sharing new designs for 992 emoji that it has revamped with a focus on “making them more universal, accessible, and authentic.” The company also provided a timeline for when they will be rolling out to its various platforms.

Besides making them cuter, Google has worked to make emoji more accurate and flexible, given their worldwide audience and need to be “globally relevant.” One interesting example is Google/Android’s pie emoji no longer being a specific slice, but rather a more general whole. 

Pie emoji is a curious one — it previously looked like a very specific American pumpkin pie (a family favorite!). Now it’s something everyone recognizes. I could crack a joke about how there’s more food to go around but it’s not really a joke: This minor change means this one emoji can represent a whole host of pies — apple pie, blueberry pie, strawberry pie, cherry pie, chicken pot pie, beef and mushroom… the list goes on.

Another change sees transportation (car, truck, cab) emoji better make use of the available space, while Google humorously says the “new design for motorway 🛣️ will pass its next driving exam.” Food characters get an accuracy/authenticity upgrade, while there are delightful tweaks to others if the dark theme is enabled. Namely, stars will appear when you’re camping at night.

In terms of availability, Google’s emoji redesign will start appearing in products this month. First up is Gmail and Google Chat, while they will come to Chromebooks with an improved emoji picker in Chrome OS 92 at the end of July.

The new emoji will come to phones with Android 12’s public launch this fall. Another big change for Android is how applications that support Appcompat will be able to get new Google emoji as they become available instead of having to rely on OS releases or even app updates. This updated library will also be available for developers this fall.

Old: Top, Bottom: New

Lastly, Google is bringing the new emoji to YouTube and live Chat “later this year.” Until then, you can peruse all the new characters below:

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Gmail and other Android apps crashing on phones: Here’s Google’s simple fix

Many people reported trouble with the Gmail app on Android. 


James Martin/CNET

Google says it’s resolved an issue that was causing Gmail and other Android apps to crash for some people on Monday. The problem apparently stemmed from a bug in a previous version of Android System WebView, a system component that lets Android apps display web content.

To fix the issue, the tech giant said people should head to Google Play to update Android System WebView and Google Chrome. 

Here are the steps Google laid out:

1. Navigate to the Play Store app
2. Search for Android System WebView
3. Select the “Update” option
4. Repeat these steps for Google Chrome

Problems with Gmail and other Android apps began to pop up on Monday afternoon and lasted roughly seven hours, according to Google’s status dashboard for Gmail. Many people turned to Twitter and Reddit to report trouble with Android apps crashing, including Samsung and Pixel phone owners. 

See also: 7 hidden Gmail features that might even help get you to inbox zero

“We apologize for the inconvenience and thank you for your patience and continued support,” Google said in the final update on its Gmail status dashboard. “Please rest assured that system reliability is a top priority at Google, and we are making continuous improvements to make our systems better.”

While Google was fixing the problem, some people found that uninstalling the buggy version of WebView provided a temporary solution. Samsung’s support account on Twitter even suggested people take that step. 

If you used this workaround while waiting for Google to fix the problem, you should reinstall WebView to restore full functionality to your phone, as well as updating Chrome. Keeping apps updated is important in order to get the latest security fixes



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Android apps like Gmail are crashing and ‘WebView’ is to blame

This afternoon, a number of Android users (self included) suddenly saw notifications pop up on their devices saying that apps had stopped running. Many of the apps throwing errors suddenly can’t be opened, and they include important ones like Gmail, a number of banking apps, Google Pay and others.

There are reports of the problem on DownDetector, Reddit and Twitter, and Google’s Workspace Cloud Status Dashboard confirms they’re aware of problems with the Gmail app on Android. According to the status message, there will be an update on the issue by 8:05 PM ET (check below for more information).

If you’re having this problem, something that’s worked for many people is to go into the Google Play Store on your device and uninstall the latest update to a system app called “Android System WebView.” It’s the app that provides Chrome-like browser rendering within apps, and according to developers and end users, many of the errors people are seeing indicate the problem resides there.

Uninstalling the updates got my phone to calm down and go back to normal, and it may work for your device. As noted below, Google has confirmed an issue with WebView and is working on a fix now.

Update (8:26 PM ET): Google has confirmed the issue and its link to the WebView app. According to a spokesperson, “We are aware of an issue with WebView causing some apps on Android to crash. We are currently working to fully validate the scope and a fix is in progress.”



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