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One of my big goals for 2022 was to minimize my Google footprint. In the last news show, I covered Google Search, Chrome and Android. In today’s show, I’ll tackle two other big ones: Google’s email (Gmail) and calendar (Gcal) services (and Google’s contacts, for good measure). I actually replaced Gmail with two different services, because they each address two different needs I have.
In others news: Microsoft finally disables Word and Excel macros by default for any file downloaded from the internet; the IRS backs off it’s requirement for using facial recognition to authenticate to the IRS website; Missouri’s prosecutor declines to prosecute the reporter who pointed out a state website which gave away social security numbers for some state employees; Kashmir Hill compares the relative privacy and tracking capabilities of AirTags, Tile and a cheap GPS tracker; two US senators are decrying a newly declassified report of a CIA program that surveils American citizens in bulk; a remote test proctoring company sinks to new lows; hundreds of Android apps were found to be tracking you using ultrasonic signals; and Google will be implementing a new privacy feature in Android that it claims is just as private as Apple’s App Tracking Transparency, but will somehow preserve the ad-based web economy.
By Carey Parker4.9
6464 ratings
One of my big goals for 2022 was to minimize my Google footprint. In the last news show, I covered Google Search, Chrome and Android. In today’s show, I’ll tackle two other big ones: Google’s email (Gmail) and calendar (Gcal) services (and Google’s contacts, for good measure). I actually replaced Gmail with two different services, because they each address two different needs I have.
In others news: Microsoft finally disables Word and Excel macros by default for any file downloaded from the internet; the IRS backs off it’s requirement for using facial recognition to authenticate to the IRS website; Missouri’s prosecutor declines to prosecute the reporter who pointed out a state website which gave away social security numbers for some state employees; Kashmir Hill compares the relative privacy and tracking capabilities of AirTags, Tile and a cheap GPS tracker; two US senators are decrying a newly declassified report of a CIA program that surveils American citizens in bulk; a remote test proctoring company sinks to new lows; hundreds of Android apps were found to be tracking you using ultrasonic signals; and Google will be implementing a new privacy feature in Android that it claims is just as private as Apple’s App Tracking Transparency, but will somehow preserve the ad-based web economy.

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