A question

Aug. 27th, 2004 10:42 am
emmagrant01: (Default)
[personal profile] emmagrant01
What's the big deal about GMail? I keep seeing people on my f-list asking for and offering invites, and I have no idea why. When I first heard about the premise, and that Google would "read" the content of emails you send and receive to target advertising to you, etc., I thought, WTF? Why would anyone want to do that?

Clearly people did want to do it, since it quickly became the "it" new email address to have. I'm still skeptical, myself. I'll offer some interesting links, though. Some of these express views that are a bit paranoid, but are still intriguing:

GMail is too creepy

"If Google builds a database of keywords associated with email addresses, the potential for abuse is staggering. Google could grow a database that spits out the email addresses of those who used those keywords. How about words such as "box cutters" in the same email as "airline schedules"? Can you think of anyone who might be interested in obtaining a list of email addresses for that particular combination? Or how about "mp3" with "download"? Since the RIAA has sent subpoenas to Internet service providers and universities in an effort to identify copyright abusers, why should we expect Gmail to be off-limits?"

Things Google knows about you

"If you use a GMail account:
• Who you send emails to
• Who sends emails to you
• The contents of those emails
• The contents of all emails received from any mailing lists of which you are a member, even if they are private mailing lists."


Privacy subtleties of GMail

"Even so, people have a reaction to a 3rd party computer doing scans like this. If you were offered a service that saved you money by having your paper mail opened by robots for scanning, which then inserted new junk mail in your box based on what it found, you might get a bit creeped out. Go further and consider a service that gave you free phone calls if it could have speech-recognizing computers listen in and barge in with product offers related to your conversation? It's easy to imagine an unpleasant situation where you get invited to a gay wedding in Vancouver, and find with it in your mailbox brochures for gifts, Vancouver hotels and a free copy of Out magazine. People have extended that fear into the e-mail realm."

Date: 2004-08-27 12:33 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] norah.livejournal.com
The reason all the people I know use it is that it's brilliant for RPG tagging - the way it "threads" conversations makes it really easy to compile tags into finihsed scenes. I have seven invites, if you want one.

Date: 2004-08-27 09:19 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] emmagrant01.livejournal.com
Other folks have told me that too, about the threading capability. I'm trying to imagine how something like that would be useful to me! :-P

Date: 2004-09-01 09:56 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] liesbyomission.livejournal.com
FYI... The pop3 email client Thunderbird also allows for threading of email conversations. I don't do much of that, so I don't have it enabled, but my dad does.

http://www.mozilla.org/products/thunderbird/

Also, thunderbird has brilliant junk mail filters. Just FYI.

Myself, I use pop3 email from my own domain so as to avoid important info being stored on servers like yahoo and hotmail.

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