![]() ![]() Google's blog post says, "Similar to how the spam folder works in Gmail, automatic classifiers will redirect files that Drive strongly suspects to be unwanted to the spam folder. With the spam folder, it sounds like Google is finally implementing the Gmail-style spam controls it needed on day one. At least Google was doing something after ignoring the problem for years. That's good for abusive people you know in real life, but it's nothing in the face of anonymous spammers that can spin up thousands of accounts in a second. In 2021, Google added the first file-sharing control to Drive, giving the ability to block individual users. Google acknowledged the problem in 2019 after a How-To Geek report highlighted a woman who couldn't stop an abusive ex-husband from sharing files with her via Drive. For a long time, there was nothing you could do to support affected users other than disabling Drive notifications, telling them to ignore the highlighted porn ads at the top of their Drive account, and warning them to never click on the "shared files" folder. For years, some people in my life have been inundated with shared Google Drive files containing porn, ads, dating site scams, and malware. Previously, Drive assumed that all shared files were legitimate and wanted, with the only "control" being "security by obscurity" and hoping no one else knew your email address.ĭrive shows any shared files in your shared documents folder, notifies you of the share on your phone, highlights the "new recent file" at the top of the Drive interface, lists the file in searches, and sends you an email about it, all without any indication that you know the file sharer at all. Anyone with your email address can "share" a file with you, and a ton of spammers already have your email address. ![]() It sounds like the update will provide a way to limit Drive's unbelievably insecure behavior of allowing random people to add files to your Drive account without your consent or control.īecause Google essentially turned Drive file-sharing into email, Google Drive needs every spam control that Gmail has. Google Drive (the file repository interface that contains your Docs, Sheets, and Slides files) is finally getting a spam folder and algorithmic spam filters, just like Gmail has. Fifteen years after launching Google Docs and Sheets with file sharing, Google is adding what sounds like adequate safety controls to the feature. ![]()
0 Comments
Leave a Reply. |