Ask HN: I’m scared of losing GMail access. Do email protection laws exist?
26 points| _pdes | 6 years ago
In the event Google decides to arbitrarily terminate my Google account, are there any email protections for me as a citizen of any country?
So much of the developed world digital life revolves around email usage. I don’t believe citizens of any nation have, in any government jurisdictions, any protection from businesses cutting off access to their email accounts. Am I wrong about this?
If not, how can I protect myself from suddenly being cut off from such a highly critical aspect of communication? The many institutions of the world intermingle government, financial, educational, utility, and other service access with the concept of an email address.
Once upon a time, GMail was a revolutionary product. I now find some of Google’s practices anti-consumer and a few business decisions of theirs a liability.
smt88|6 years ago
My horror story:
I have a mentally ill relative who only logged in every 6 months. He got treatment and wanted to resume using his email account. Guess what? Google thought his activity was "suspicious" and permanently locked him out. We went through an infuriating loop of proving his identity, then getting a message saying a human was reviewing it. Then we'd go back to proving his identity. This went on for 15-20 cycles over the course of 8 months.
The only way to get out of it was to contact my friend who works for Google. Otherwise my relative had lost gigabytes of irreplaceable data. We would've gladly paid $1,000+ for the privilege of talking to a real human about it, but that's impossible.
catacombs|6 years ago
The fact Google doesn't have a way for people to talk to a human during a crisis is moronic. That's why I've moved off Google with as much stuff as possible.
I don't think I'd have the patience to deal with something like this and rely on automated systems to deal with my problems.
throwaway156503|6 years ago
quickthrower2|6 years ago
(i) you won't be able to access importing accounts e.g. bank accounts where your email is your gmail account.
(ii) you won't be able to see your old emails.
Solutions
(i) Buy a domain name and use that for your emails. Forward those to GMail initially but you can forward them to something else if you ever lose GMail access. Update all your accounts to this new email address.
(ii) Use Google Takeout to download all of your Google data, including your GMail.
jolmg|6 years ago
perl4ever|6 years ago
I am beginning to think it is a notable security hole, as Gmail shouldn't, and surely does not in general, allow a session to last for years without timing out or requiring re-authentication.
jobigoud|6 years ago
golem14|6 years ago
d) use your gmail account only for gmail and do YT, adwords etc from another google account so that if you run afoul of Terms of service on one product your gmail is not terminated also.
Only c) allows you to keep your email address after losing access to gmail. a) and b) just protect your data.
But based on anecdata, Google is unlikely to kick out users unless there's some bad behaviour (which may seem innocent to you)
throwaway156503|6 years ago
I don't believe I've ever violated any terms of service Google has ever outlined. In practice, I have nothing to worry about. This concern of mine primarily revolves around legal protections, and rights as a "digital citizen" of sorts.
smt88|6 years ago
robertcope|6 years ago
throwaway156503|6 years ago
usrlocaletc|6 years ago
- https://www.cloudhq.net
- Make periodic backups of Gmail using IMAP https://duckduckgo.com/?q=gmail+backup+migration
smt88|6 years ago
sammyo|6 years ago
aquabeagle|6 years ago
perl4ever|6 years ago
There's also the issue that nothing other than gmail works very well on an android phone.
I started using email long before Google existed, but I'm not really familiar with a good alternative at this point. It's not that I wouldn't theoretically pay money for a good old fashioned email provider with human customer service, but I really don't think such a business exists anymore, due to the proliferation of free email. And a small-time automated business is going to be worse than a big-time automated business anyway. It's just not 1993 any more.
smt88|6 years ago
OP might know that paid services exist, but many of them have a reputation for having worse search and fewer access options than Gmail.
throwaway156503|6 years ago
simplecomplex|6 years ago
probinso|6 years ago
codevark|6 years ago
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