News, reviews, articles on the topic Google
Three weeks after Apple, Google removed four Russian apps from its store following EU sanctions that explicitly named FSB supervision of the Max messenger.
A US court injunction — not a regulatory deal — forces Google to open its Play Store catalog to competing app stores for the first time.
A new 'How this ad was made' panel in My Ad Center shows whether generative AI was used — but Google won't verify that advertisers are telling the truth.
Video Remix, powered by Gemini Omni, lets you restyle and relight home videos with a text prompt. It launched July 8, but only for paying subscribers in select countries.
A June 2026 policy change quietly made images, audio, and video you send to Google Search fair game for AI training. Your Google Photos are safe — but everything else may not be.
SMS, call history, and device settings will now eat into your 15GB Google Account limit — but most users won't notice much difference.
The company behind Facebook and Instagram is building a cloud business to monetize its massive AI infrastructure, putting it in direct competition with Amazon, Google, and Microsoft.
Google's new voice search for Gmail is rolling out in beta, locked behind its priciest AI subscription tiers.
Gemini's "Take notes for me" feature lands for AI Pro and Ultra subscribers, but a steep price and an 8-language limit give rivals room to compete.
Google and artist Refik Anadol opened Dataland in LA on June 20. It reads your heartbeat in real time. That's where things get interesting.
Google's first new smart speaker since the Nest Audio arrives June 25 with AI built in, but Gemini Live and daily briefings are locked behind a monthly subscription.
Google's new smartwatch software brings custom widgets, live scores, and a 10% battery boost. The on-device AI upgrade, though, requires new hardware.
Google's Manifest V3 transition reaches its final stage this summer, leaving 40 million uBlock Origin users with a stripped-down alternative or a reason to switch browsers.
No download, no subscription, no powerful PC required — just open Google Earth on the web and take off over any city on the planet.














