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Google now lets free GSuite users “opt out” of account shutdown

37 points| struct | 3 years ago |arstechnica.com

10 comments

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greycol|3 years ago

Good on Google for walking this back.

I have no clue on dkim/spf/dmarc implementation details (so correct me if I'm wrong) but I can't imagine it costs google anymore to send an email as "yourname@example.com" vs "From yourname@gmail.com on behalf of yourname@example.com".

Assuming that's the case as soon as it was walked back from don't pay and your account, data, and purchases are gone to don't pay and only your email is gone but you're allowed to create a free email like everyone else they were in a unenviable position.

They'd basically have to waste engineer and support hours to make an objectively worse system just to reclassify domain names in emails as premium for a group that new customers couldn't be part of. Even then the price tag on premium addresses is much less with an email forwarder rather than the large price (for families) that google wanted.

jonny_eh|3 years ago

If you already transitioned to a paid account (like me) you can easily switch back to free. Go to admin.google.com, click the "Help" icon on the top right of the page, click "contact support" at the bottom, click "question about G Suite legacy free edition", click "I used G Suite legacy free edition for personal use", click the big blue button: "Switch back to GSuite Legacy free".

op00to|3 years ago

This doesn’t work on my account.

oceanghost|3 years ago

Dear google:

I run a family email domain from GSuite. Let me pay you for SOMETHING that's less than a full business account. I never expected the free ride to last 16 years.

iamcurious|3 years ago

A dollar or two per month would be nice. Enough to know what to expect, but not so much that I consider other severs.

kotaKat|3 years ago

I'm assuming if you deleted your free GSuite account at the beginning in a panic, you're probably screwed, right?