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659

Archive: https://archive.today/1UnoV

From the post:

>Google has decided to retire its free dark web monitoring tool, saying it wasn’t as helpful as the company hoped. In a support page, the Google announced the discontinuation of the “dark web report” tool, two years after offering it as a free perk to Gmail users before expanding it more broadly. The feature worked by scanning for your email addresses to determine whether they had appeared in data breaches, which often circulate on Dark Web marketplaces. The tool could then alert you about where the data was exposed, including any accompanying details such as dates of birth, addresses, and phone numbers.

Archive: https://archive.today/1UnoV From the post: >>Google has decided to retire its free dark web monitoring tool, saying it wasn’t as helpful as the company hoped. In a support page, the Google announced the discontinuation of the “dark web report” tool, two years after offering it as a free perk to Gmail users before expanding it more broadly. The feature worked by scanning for your email addresses to determine whether they had appeared in data breaches, which often circulate on Dark Web marketplaces. The tool could then alert you about where the data was exposed, including any accompanying details such as dates of birth, addresses, and phone numbers.

(post is archived)

[–] 1 pt

I was sleepy as I read this post and kept seeing/thinking they were shutting the daNkweb down.

[–] 1 pt

Were people figuring out that Google was leaking their data?