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Report: Google Lets App Developers Scan People’s Emails

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Google has reportedly been letting software developers scan the emails of millions of people who use Gmail, the tech company’s popular proprietary communications service.

Some of these companies, like Return Path, collect certain data from those who have downloaded one of its free apps and give it to marketers, according to an article published Monday by The Wall Street Journal.

Google said its own computers would stop reading personal communications in order to create a targeted ad system because of privacy concerns in June 2017. By allowing others to continue the practice, it’s likely that many would still consider Google a tech giant that doesn’t care about keeping people’s data and correspondence confidential, at least enough.

The practice of permitting, even empowering companies to analyze such personal information apparently isn’t that unfounded.

It’s a “common practice,” Thede Loder, the former chief technology officer at eDataSource, a competitor to Return Path, told TheWSJ. “Some people might consider that to be a dirty secret. It’s kind of reality.”

TheWSJ said it discovered Google’s deal with outside app developers by interviewing “more than two dozen current and former employees of email app makers and data companies,” making it curious as to if or why Google thought this was going to be kept hush.

Google only gives data to those it has thoroughly investigated and trusts, the company told TheWSJ. Internally, only the data and emails that are pursuant to a case of alleged abuse or a bug can be read or perused.

Google did not respond to The Daily Caller News Foundation’s request for comment in time for publication.

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