Google set to launch advanced Gmail security features for govt officials
Alphabet’s Google Inc today that it would roll out an advanced protection programme in order to provide stronger security for government officials and journalists who are at a higher risk of being targeted by hackers.
The internet giant added that users of the programme would have their account security continuously updated to deal with emerging threats.
The company said it would initially provide three defenses against security threats, which include blocking fraudulent account access and protection against phishing. The programme would include additional reviews and requests in the account recovery process to prevent fraudulent access by hackers who try to gain access by pretending they have been locked out.
The rollout of a suite of new email security services by Google follows a U.S. presidential election in 2016 that was shaped in part by the disclosure of emails by anti-secrecy group WikiLeaks belonging to associates of Democratic candidate Hillary Clinton that were obtained through phishing schemes.
U.S. intelligence agencies have concluded that those hacks, which included a breach of Clinton campaign manager John Podesta’s personal Gmail account, were carried out by Russia as part of a broader cyber campaign to help President Donald Trump, a Republican, win the White House. “If John Podesta had Advanced Protection in 2016, the world might be a very different place,” said Joseph Lorenzo Hall, chief technologist at the Centre for Democracy and Technology, who was briefed on the new features by Google.
Hall said the new features would grow the amount of high-risk consumers with strong protections against phishing campaigns, but that they would potentially create compatibility issues among some who already integrate custom security tools with their Gmail account.