Google beefs up Gmail security amid fallout from computer hacking attack in China
By APWednesday, January 13, 2010
Google’s Gmail adds security after China hacking
MOUNTAIN VIEW, Calif. — Google is tightening the security of its free e-mail service to combat computer hackers like the ones that recently targeted it in China.
With the shift, Gmail accounts will automatically be set in an “https” mode, meaning contents of e-mail will be scrambled so they’re less likely to leak out to unauthorized users. Before, only the log-in data was encrypted.
Google hadn’t been using this more secure format as Gmail’s default setting because it can be slower than the unprotected mode.
The shift to the more secure setting began late Tuesday, just a few hours after Google announced Chinese hackers had pried into the e-mail accounts of human rights activists. Google is now considering pulling out of China and shutting down its search engine there because of the attacks.
Tags: Asia, California, China, East Asia, Greater China, Mountain View, North America, Technology Issues, United States