Gmail users are being warned that they have been secretly opted in to a feature that allows the tech giant to access their private emails. Google is using access to scan messages and attachments to help train AI models like Gemini. That means your personal and work emails could be read and used without you explicitly agreeing to it first. The issue has already spurred a class-action lawsuit against Google, claiming the company activated the hidden setting in Gmail to secretly exploit users’ email history. To completely opt out, you must manually disable Smart Features in two separate locations within Gmail settings. This multi-step process appears deliberately complex, requiring careful attention to ensure complete protection.
While Google has argued that it doesn't use Gmail content directly for training Gemini, the opt-in still raises concerns about how your data is handled and if it's not more vulnerable to a breach by hackers.











