Google announced on Tuesday Gmail users will soon be able to send and receive encrypted emails without a third-party provider ...
Google is updating Gmail to allow enterprise users to send encrypted messages to any inbox in just a few clicks. Google says ...
When Google uses the term E2EE in this context, it means that an email is encrypted inside Chrome, Firefox, or just about any ...
Google is rolling out a seamless way for Gmail enterprise users to send encrypted emails to others, starting with people in ...
Gmail now allows enterprise users to send end-to-end encrypted emails to colleagues, and will soon allow sending to any inbox ...
Gmail is 21 years old today and for its birthday present it wants to give the gift of easier encryption for all. This is a ...
Google is making it easier for Gmail users to send end-to-end encrypted (E2EE) emails to anyone by adopting a process that does away with complex options like S/MIME and instead uses encrypted keys ...
Companies can sign-up for beta access (“send E2EE emails to Gmail users in your own organization“) starting today. This will expand to sending “E2EE emails to any Gmail inbox” in the coming weeks.
Google is making it much easier for businesses to send encrypted emails, even to people who don’t use Gmail. Until now, end-to-end encryption (also called E2EE) was something only large companies or ...
Google said it has been working on simplifying the S/MIME protocol to simplify end-to-end encryption in emails.