I got into a situation a couple of years ago with Google over a few dollars when I terminated my paid GSuite account. It was impossible to contact them to settle the balance. They kept sending emails from a Google-branded department that was clearly outsourced. The process was literally Kafka-esque.
Didn’t manage it in the end. Ended up going to collections who happily listened and cancelled the debt.
I was a happy paying email customer of many years.
I now am sworn never to enter any kind of relationship with Google, and encourage to do the same.
I still wonder why they literally don't seem to care in Europe. I've overdrawn billing accounts (by accident) two times, one 10 years ago, one a year ago. Nothing happened until I remembered about them months and months later, I went to check and both times the accounts were just sitting there closed. Checked my email and they sent like two payment reminders in the first 2 weeks and then nothing ever again.. the one 10 years ago is still sitting there.. it's not like they couldn't have sent it to debt collections, that's also a popular thing here lol.
Same. They did a “funny” thing where they routed my balance owed refund request around the world twice I think I have 12 bounces in the thread. Every bounce was the same useless canned information.
For every hour I wasted on it I filed a complaint with a regulatory body. It probably cost the millions of dollars.
I recommend everyone in a similar situation do the same.
Currently going through this with Reddit. Their appeal process is to submit a form which may or may not be processed, and there is zero feedback for the user. Common advice is to submit the form daily.
I have submitted it 200 times over the past year. I know that it probably just goes into a black void, but it is apparently the official review process, and I am 100% sure there were no rule violations (I was flagged for responding to new threads too quickly and reposting the same educational link a few times because I was answering the same sort of question). It's cruel really. Somehow they made something even worse than the Google approach. Presumably tens of thousands of users are wasting time every single day doing this.
Like others have said, most tech companies are like this and it's unacceptable, even if users are the product.
A few months ago I browsed r/all by new and downvoted every crypto scam post to unrelated subreddits I saw. This raised a red flag somewhere inside Reddit (my guess is that I was interfering with some Reddit admin's crypto scams) and my 18 year old account was suspended until I could respond to an email at the address it was registered from that I no longer had access to almost two decades later. An appeal was ignored.
I was furious about losing the account for about two minutes before I realised that nothing of any importance had been lost, shrugged, and created a new account.
Why would you keep trying 200 times to use a site that hates and ignores you? Just find something else to do online.
If HN suddenly banned my account out of nowhere for no discernible reason, I’m not going to E-mail dang 200 times. I’d just find some other site to read. Life is too short to do business with companies that despise you.
Well I have a text file with 5 boiler plate messages. When I boot the screens up every day, I open a new tab and 7 seconds later a new appeal has been submitted.
I do admit that there is a slight prick of annoyance at the start of every day because of this, but I'm well into sunk cost fallacy into the realm of morbid curiosity and flagellation.
Part of the reason is because I manage an account that has a major position in Reddit equity options, so I have to read the name everyday regardless. Indeed I was banned because my option trading advice was too quick and frequent (man, that sub needs some serious basic theory help)... Of course, you can be assured that their horrible customer goodwill may possibly come up in future conversations when I mention the position.
I thought about just emailing IR, but I've actually talked to someone else in a similar position who has contacted IR and they did nothing either.
I was a major contributor to an open source Reddit alternative after the API lockdown, but unfortunately after 2 years I just didn't think that it was going anywhere big and backed out of that, so been there done that to some degree, and that was a good 500 plus hours of investment (although it was net positive - it was fun to grow an old school internet community even though it is never going to compete with Reddit).
The main issue is that they ban all accounts that they can fingerprint to other banned accounts, and I have an account in hibernation that is 15 years old and truly has a huge portion of my life contained in it. It's much like OP and losing a Google account. I think that is the main reason why I grovel to the uncaring corporate shell that encompasses the community that I once help to build when I came over in the great digg migration. I should probably just export the data and vectorize it into an LLM, and just close the book on the few old friends that I'd like to reconnect with someday.
Speaking of Digg, I hear they're rebooting, and things are going well behind the scenes...
Ultimately, if you don’t have group chats on other platforms with the people you’re connected with, you will eventually lose those connections due to platform fragmentation type issues. Online social networks are all too fragile.
> When I boot the screens up every day, I open a new tab and 7 seconds later a new appeal has been submitted.
I hate to be the bearer of bad news but at this stage you're messages are insta-filtered and so you're probably not even causing the slight annoyance.
As the other poster mentioned, it's probably best to just move on, or if you're adamant about interacting with people on Reddit of all places, then why not just create another account?
They fingerprint users and ban all associated accounts.
...and believe it or not, it takes months of appeals for some Shadowbanned users to have their appeal lifted. What I'm not sure about is if there is a hidden ban length, and if submitting an appeal automatically lifts the ban if the ban length has passed. I'm guessing that this is the actual case of how it all works.
None of this should really matter. At the end of the day, the company is being hostile to you. Bans, and shadowbans, and appeals, and appeals to appeals... good grief! They're telling you they don't like you and they don't want you around. Why do you care so much about the mechanics of the automation they use to tell you to go away? Life is too short.
I remember I was banned from Fark once. Remember Fark? I was actually a paying member, too! It was the last time I visited or even thought about the site (until writing this comment). It didn't even remotely occur to me to try to understand the banning mechanism or what appeal options I have. I'm not going to grovel and beg some stupid website to let me back in if they don't want me around!
> I have an account in hibernation that is 15 years old and truly has a huge portion of my life contained in it. It's much like OP and losing a Google account.
Note that Reddit allows you to log into a banned account and have read access. You can also edit your previously-posted comments. So log in, export everything you want, edit all comments to nonsense as a "fuck you" to Reddit (there are scripts and browser extensions to do this, because a lot of people think Reddit deserves a "fuck you") then forget about it ever again.
I encrypt so much of the stuff I upload to google drive or email. In my case, more because my filetypes and contents tend to trigger malware detection (even though literally none of it is malware or even security research).
Stories like this are why I do it. I don’t know when something is going to get flagged - NSFW or otherwise. I really should de-google and I mean to. Buts its a daunting project for the email address I’ve had since 2004 (my email is now old enough to drink in USA).
2) Subscribed to an email service that lets you use your own domain (for example fastmail)
3) Forwarded all of my email from my gmail account to my new email/domain, and use my new email/domain in all correspondence.
4) Made a separate google account for every google service I used. For example, I made a separate account from my gmail for google play, google cloud and youtube.
It's a bit of work but this allowed me to slowly ease myself out of gmail, and derisk my account activity. Even if fastmail screws up, I can always point my domain at another email provider like protonmail.
Oh, also:
5) Use syncthing for file storage. It's cheap and I can back up TB worth of stuff from decades ago.
(4) doesn’t necessarily help due to googles “Sensorvault”. I’ve read stories where one employee's personal account ban (or ex-employee) resulted in all “related accounts” getting banned as well, locking out an entire business due to some perceived violation on someones personal account, and other employee's personal accounts got suspended by association as well: https://www.reddit.com/r/tifu/comments/8kvias/tifu_by_gettin...
I want to do this too, but what’s your threat model around losing access to your domain name?
To maintain a Gmail account, you need to:
1. Do nothing
2. Don’t be unlucky
To maintain a domain name, you need to:
1. Keep a functioning credit card forever
2. Make sure the domain name is renewed forever
3. Take action if your registrar goes out of business
The odds of something going wrong with your domain name, while still low, seem higher. Are you banking on the fact that you can talk to a human at your registrar to resolve issues?
you can buy years on a domain up until 10 years, at any time. You check every 5 years, you will have 5 years of time to recover from any issue that crops up on your side
>I want to do this too, but what’s your threat model around losing access to your domain name?
I have no solution for this, other than choose a trustworthy registrar. It's the weak link. Perhaps it will be fixed in the future with some petname system
I’ve been thinking about this problem from the other side of the fence: what if I use the provider’s domain and the provider goes away? Not likely in the case of Gmail, but I use Proton Mail, and frankly don’t entirely trust them not to disappear overnight. Or ban me due to some automated AI decision I can’t appeal.
Let me be clear: I deeply appreciate Google’s efforts to detect and report CSAM. These systems are vital for protecting children and stopping abuse, and I fully support that mission.
But good intentions are not a substitute for fairness. Right now, individuals who are falsely flagged have no way to defend themselves, no way to clear their name, and no meaningful path to restore their livelihood.
If a system is powerful enough to destroy someone’s life, it should also be strong enough to offer transparency, review, and correction. That’s all I — and others like me — are asking for: a fair process to protect the innocent while continuing the fight against real harm."
I'm a real person — this actually happened to me last Thursday.
My name is Mark Russo. I’m not going to be shamed or erased. I created an app called Punge that’s live on both iOS and Android. The article wasn't written by ChatGPT — it's my story. I used ChatGPT to help tighten the writing, but every word reflects what I lived through.
Since this happened, I’ve reached out to lawyers, media, lawmakers, and professional contacts — even people I know at Google. I’ve lost access to everything tied to my account: Gmail, Firebase, AdMob, and the infrastructure that powers my apps. Google won’t even tell me which file triggered the CSAM flag.
Even if — by some miracle — I get my account back, I’m committed to making sure this kind of thing doesn’t keep happening. No one should lose their digital life overnight, with no transparency, no due process, and no way to defend themselves.
According to this NYT article: https://www.nytimes.com/2022/12/30/technology/google-appeals... — people who manage to claw their way out of this nightmare usually do so only after getting media attention. A CBS reporter has shown some interest. If anyone here has been through something similar, message me on LinkedIn — I’ll do whatever I can to help share your story too.
ChatGPT generated or not, I had a situation like this too with another large platform. It's an issue I would like to see discussed more, whether this article's case is fake or not.
Most likely it's both real and LLM generated. As in they gave their case, asked the LLM to write this article, did some very minimal editing and copy-pasted.
Google suspended my payments account a few months ago without even notifying me. I never received a reason for the suspension, but I suspect it's related to a failed game refund from Stadia, as I see a refund error in my payment notifications. Dealing with Google Support has been a Kafkaesque loop where I have to explain the same thing over and over, only to get the same scripted instructions that take me nowhere. After this dance, they finally say they will "escalate" the issue and then close the case. At this point, I've given up and am in the process of de-googling my life.
It doesn't sound risk free, but in a reasonable world, the risk would just be accidentally downloading a virus or something and having to wipe your PC, not being unpersoned for life by Google.
The name "Google drive" implies it's like a hardware disk: unaware of even the filesystem, much less the files, stored on it. Most users likely think of it that way and don't notice until they accidentally trigger things.
People have been saying “The Cloud is just someone else’s computer” for decades. We still apparently have not fully internalized this fact. It’s only your data if it’s on your metal, in your physical possession.
If you have anything even remotely important tied to your email address… then at least get your own domain name associated with it. It’s not a 100% guarantee that things won’t go wrong, but at least you can recover if your current digital feudal lord turns their ire on you.
I was lucky enough to have had my (first - pretty nice little common username) Gmail account summarily culled towards the early years of my email usage. I was young and I hadn't used the email anywhere where it could get critical - I don't think I had anything critical in life at that time. Besides, my country hadn't moved to emails for personal communications and interactions - it never did, it just teleported into instant messaging.
I was never given a reason. I tried to reach out and, of course, we know how it ends (even then). The thing is, I didn't even use it for anything other than sending emails to friends who were starting in other colleges and kind of just using emails for the sake of using emails. It was the new tool for me. Except one - the teenage me was in long and cosy exchanges with a nice someone many states and thousands of kilometres over talking about Jane Austen and Tolstoy and their works that we both read and loved and what not and also sharing with each other things I now definitely would not call poetry. That still feels like a loss - even after some two odd decades. The silliest thing - I didn't remember the email. Those were the good old days of r1d1clulux_paynthr_56789_b0mb@rediffmail.com. We never asked or revealed each other's names. Those were days like that when you didn't have to worry about whether you were talking to a cat or a fish.
I started using other email services (Yahoo, Hotmail - for a long time those were my main emails) and when I started working I got a domain and moved to a paid email host.
This also taught me a lesson about using free services. Hell, even when using a paid service this can happen. Apple is an example. You feel Google does it, oh boy oh boy, Apple knows how to do the true stonewalling! When you are on the phone with a real human being and that human being stonewalls you and their company (Apple) doesn't even allow that human being to help you, or escalate, or move up in the support chain, you feel that is real something - esp. if you are in a country where consumer laws are less than jokes! Anyway, so that taught me to be ready, to have backups (not just as in data, but as in options), and fallbacks.
I think everyone should experience things like this, but kinda early in life :)
PS. Naah, OP's case isn't like mine. But then people like me (and maybe OP and maybe you) allowed and enabled (still do) Googles and Apples of this world to be this big that they can just do it and get away with it and it doesn't even matter even in countries where consumer laws have real functioning teeth. So that's there.
All evidence to date forces the conclusion that trusting Google for anything important is tremendously foolish. That includes email, cloud-hosting, search, google apps of any kind, etc.
This wasn't just data loss and wouldn't have been prevented by having backups. In particular, note that he can't receive new emails or publish updates to his apps anymore. And even if it were just data loss, it's still entirely Google's fault, and victim blaming to suggest otherwise.
All professional and personal eMail through gMail?
Oof, buddy. That cock-up is on you. Even if you don’t want to administer your own iron, there are plenty of third-party services that can host your eMail domain.
And with a little work, there is eMail-in-a-box for a turnkey solution, and others like hMailServer if you just want a minimalistic low-effort server running on an old Windows box in your basement.
No it's not.
The absolute vast majority of professional and personal emails go through the big 3, Gmail, Yahoo, msn/hotmail/outlook.
What we need is better laws to ensure email is treated similar to utilities with strong consumer protection and appeal system, not victim blaming.
Which countries are you thinking about? Honestly haven't seen a company in the EU self hosting email for probably 15 years, and I used to run the email server at a company.
Self-hosted mail servers are not common anywhere. Smaller providers are more common in some places. Small provider isn't the same as self-hosted; neither is enterprise.
There are still countless exchange servers running in the default enterprise MS setup. Perhaps not for long since MS nudges people into their cloud, but they are still fairly common.
Google clearly states CSAM is forbidden on their platform.
The user stored CSAM on Google Drive. Regardless whether it is for academic research or not - which in this case, it wasn't. It was for training a model.
Do you really think Google wants to be on the front page of the newspaper saying it allows users to store CSAM?
The user has been caught off guard and that's on them.
And yes, you're not safe either if you store CSAM on Google. Who in their right mind thinks they are?
CSAM is the author's baseless speculation, but I could find no evidence suggesting NudeNet contains any. That it's hosted on GitHub, all its files are on archive.org, and is a widely used data-set 6 years old by now, all indicate that it doesn't contain CSAM.
In general, when a company does something hostile and unreasonable, let's not invent out of thin air facts to excuse their behavior, shall we? Especially since their stonewalling is deliberate.
I got into a situation a couple of years ago with Google over a few dollars when I terminated my paid GSuite account. It was impossible to contact them to settle the balance. They kept sending emails from a Google-branded department that was clearly outsourced. The process was literally Kafka-esque.
Didn’t manage it in the end. Ended up going to collections who happily listened and cancelled the debt.
I was a happy paying email customer of many years.
I now am sworn never to enter any kind of relationship with Google, and encourage to do the same.
I still wonder why they literally don't seem to care in Europe. I've overdrawn billing accounts (by accident) two times, one 10 years ago, one a year ago. Nothing happened until I remembered about them months and months later, I went to check and both times the accounts were just sitting there closed. Checked my email and they sent like two payment reminders in the first 2 weeks and then nothing ever again.. the one 10 years ago is still sitting there.. it's not like they couldn't have sent it to debt collections, that's also a popular thing here lol.
That’s legacy thinking. Customers are cattle not pets!
I’m in the UK btw.
Same. They did a “funny” thing where they routed my balance owed refund request around the world twice I think I have 12 bounces in the thread. Every bounce was the same useless canned information.
For every hour I wasted on it I filed a complaint with a regulatory body. It probably cost the millions of dollars. I recommend everyone in a similar situation do the same.
Currently going through this with Reddit. Their appeal process is to submit a form which may or may not be processed, and there is zero feedback for the user. Common advice is to submit the form daily.
I have submitted it 200 times over the past year. I know that it probably just goes into a black void, but it is apparently the official review process, and I am 100% sure there were no rule violations (I was flagged for responding to new threads too quickly and reposting the same educational link a few times because I was answering the same sort of question). It's cruel really. Somehow they made something even worse than the Google approach. Presumably tens of thousands of users are wasting time every single day doing this.
Like others have said, most tech companies are like this and it's unacceptable, even if users are the product.
What’s so important about your Reddit account that you would file a request to restore 200 times? Also, no judgement, but that sounds a little weird.
Why go to this much trouble for a Reddit account?
A few months ago I browsed r/all by new and downvoted every crypto scam post to unrelated subreddits I saw. This raised a red flag somewhere inside Reddit (my guess is that I was interfering with some Reddit admin's crypto scams) and my 18 year old account was suspended until I could respond to an email at the address it was registered from that I no longer had access to almost two decades later. An appeal was ignored.
I was furious about losing the account for about two minutes before I realised that nothing of any importance had been lost, shrugged, and created a new account.
Why would you keep trying 200 times to use a site that hates and ignores you? Just find something else to do online.
If HN suddenly banned my account out of nowhere for no discernible reason, I’m not going to E-mail dang 200 times. I’d just find some other site to read. Life is too short to do business with companies that despise you.
Well I have a text file with 5 boiler plate messages. When I boot the screens up every day, I open a new tab and 7 seconds later a new appeal has been submitted.
I do admit that there is a slight prick of annoyance at the start of every day because of this, but I'm well into sunk cost fallacy into the realm of morbid curiosity and flagellation.
Part of the reason is because I manage an account that has a major position in Reddit equity options, so I have to read the name everyday regardless. Indeed I was banned because my option trading advice was too quick and frequent (man, that sub needs some serious basic theory help)... Of course, you can be assured that their horrible customer goodwill may possibly come up in future conversations when I mention the position.
I thought about just emailing IR, but I've actually talked to someone else in a similar position who has contacted IR and they did nothing either.
I was a major contributor to an open source Reddit alternative after the API lockdown, but unfortunately after 2 years I just didn't think that it was going anywhere big and backed out of that, so been there done that to some degree, and that was a good 500 plus hours of investment (although it was net positive - it was fun to grow an old school internet community even though it is never going to compete with Reddit).
The main issue is that they ban all accounts that they can fingerprint to other banned accounts, and I have an account in hibernation that is 15 years old and truly has a huge portion of my life contained in it. It's much like OP and losing a Google account. I think that is the main reason why I grovel to the uncaring corporate shell that encompasses the community that I once help to build when I came over in the great digg migration. I should probably just export the data and vectorize it into an LLM, and just close the book on the few old friends that I'd like to reconnect with someday.
Speaking of Digg, I hear they're rebooting, and things are going well behind the scenes...
Ultimately, if you don’t have group chats on other platforms with the people you’re connected with, you will eventually lose those connections due to platform fragmentation type issues. Online social networks are all too fragile.
Very much part of the reason why I'm trying to stay off of Discord. Unfortunately it's getting near impossible to do.
“Huge portion of my life contained in it”
You are more than your Reddit account.
> When I boot the screens up every day, I open a new tab and 7 seconds later a new appeal has been submitted.
I hate to be the bearer of bad news but at this stage you're messages are insta-filtered and so you're probably not even causing the slight annoyance.
As the other poster mentioned, it's probably best to just move on, or if you're adamant about interacting with people on Reddit of all places, then why not just create another account?
They fingerprint users and ban all associated accounts.
...and believe it or not, it takes months of appeals for some Shadowbanned users to have their appeal lifted. What I'm not sure about is if there is a hidden ban length, and if submitting an appeal automatically lifts the ban if the ban length has passed. I'm guessing that this is the actual case of how it all works.
None of this should really matter. At the end of the day, the company is being hostile to you. Bans, and shadowbans, and appeals, and appeals to appeals... good grief! They're telling you they don't like you and they don't want you around. Why do you care so much about the mechanics of the automation they use to tell you to go away? Life is too short.
I remember I was banned from Fark once. Remember Fark? I was actually a paying member, too! It was the last time I visited or even thought about the site (until writing this comment). It didn't even remotely occur to me to try to understand the banning mechanism or what appeal options I have. I'm not going to grovel and beg some stupid website to let me back in if they don't want me around!
> I have an account in hibernation that is 15 years old and truly has a huge portion of my life contained in it. It's much like OP and losing a Google account.
Note that Reddit allows you to log into a banned account and have read access. You can also edit your previously-posted comments. So log in, export everything you want, edit all comments to nonsense as a "fuck you" to Reddit (there are scripts and browser extensions to do this, because a lot of people think Reddit deserves a "fuck you") then forget about it ever again.
Does read-only access not preclude the possibility of editing old comments?
I encrypt so much of the stuff I upload to google drive or email. In my case, more because my filetypes and contents tend to trigger malware detection (even though literally none of it is malware or even security research).
Stories like this are why I do it. I don’t know when something is going to get flagged - NSFW or otherwise. I really should de-google and I mean to. Buts its a daunting project for the email address I’ve had since 2004 (my email is now old enough to drink in USA).
I was in the same position. here's what I did:
1) Got my own domain
2) Subscribed to an email service that lets you use your own domain (for example fastmail)
3) Forwarded all of my email from my gmail account to my new email/domain, and use my new email/domain in all correspondence.
4) Made a separate google account for every google service I used. For example, I made a separate account from my gmail for google play, google cloud and youtube.
It's a bit of work but this allowed me to slowly ease myself out of gmail, and derisk my account activity. Even if fastmail screws up, I can always point my domain at another email provider like protonmail.
Oh, also:
5) Use syncthing for file storage. It's cheap and I can back up TB worth of stuff from decades ago.
(4) doesn’t necessarily help due to googles “Sensorvault”. I’ve read stories where one employee's personal account ban (or ex-employee) resulted in all “related accounts” getting banned as well, locking out an entire business due to some perceived violation on someones personal account, and other employee's personal accounts got suspended by association as well: https://www.reddit.com/r/tifu/comments/8kvias/tifu_by_gettin...
https://old.reddit.com/r/androiddev/comments/ts6jfg/google_h...
Also using multiple accounts can result in suspension: https://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=34961069
I want to do this too, but what’s your threat model around losing access to your domain name?
To maintain a Gmail account, you need to:
1. Do nothing
2. Don’t be unlucky
To maintain a domain name, you need to:
1. Keep a functioning credit card forever
2. Make sure the domain name is renewed forever
3. Take action if your registrar goes out of business
The odds of something going wrong with your domain name, while still low, seem higher. Are you banking on the fact that you can talk to a human at your registrar to resolve issues?
you can buy years on a domain up until 10 years, at any time. You check every 5 years, you will have 5 years of time to recover from any issue that crops up on your side
>I want to do this too, but what’s your threat model around losing access to your domain name?
I have no solution for this, other than choose a trustworthy registrar. It's the weak link. Perhaps it will be fixed in the future with some petname system
I’ve been thinking about this problem from the other side of the fence: what if I use the provider’s domain and the provider goes away? Not likely in the case of Gmail, but I use Proton Mail, and frankly don’t entirely trust them not to disappear overnight. Or ban me due to some automated AI decision I can’t appeal.
At the very least, do a Google Takeout. One step forward.
> I fully support systems that prevent harmful content.
"'I never thought leopards would eat MY face,' sobs woman who voted for the Leopards Eating People's Faces Party."
We agree I fully support systems that protect children,
Read my medium article
"When You’re Accused, You’re Erased" https://medium.com/@russoatlarge_93541/7a09ebe8bf6a In the article I say:
"A Necessary Fight — But Accountability Matters
Let me be clear: I deeply appreciate Google’s efforts to detect and report CSAM. These systems are vital for protecting children and stopping abuse, and I fully support that mission.
But good intentions are not a substitute for fairness. Right now, individuals who are falsely flagged have no way to defend themselves, no way to clear their name, and no meaningful path to restore their livelihood.
If a system is powerful enough to destroy someone’s life, it should also be strong enough to offer transparency, review, and correction. That’s all I — and others like me — are asking for: a fair process to protect the innocent while continuing the fight against real harm."
[dead]
It's a ChatGPT generated article. Probably wouldn't bother reading too much in to it
I'm a real person — this actually happened to me last Thursday.
My name is Mark Russo. I’m not going to be shamed or erased. I created an app called Punge that’s live on both iOS and Android. The article wasn't written by ChatGPT — it's my story. I used ChatGPT to help tighten the writing, but every word reflects what I lived through.
Here’s the app: iOS: https://apps.apple.com/us/app/punge/id6450322655?platform=ip... Android: https://play.google.com/store/apps/details?id=com.markatlarg... TikTok demo: https://www.tiktok.com/t/ZPHpvJJLHsQyK-Cfk4Y/
Since this happened, I’ve reached out to lawyers, media, lawmakers, and professional contacts — even people I know at Google. I’ve lost access to everything tied to my account: Gmail, Firebase, AdMob, and the infrastructure that powers my apps. Google won’t even tell me which file triggered the CSAM flag.
Even if — by some miracle — I get my account back, I’m committed to making sure this kind of thing doesn’t keep happening. No one should lose their digital life overnight, with no transparency, no due process, and no way to defend themselves.
According to this NYT article: https://www.nytimes.com/2022/12/30/technology/google-appeals... — people who manage to claw their way out of this nightmare usually do so only after getting media attention. A CBS reporter has shown some interest. If anyone here has been through something similar, message me on LinkedIn — I’ll do whatever I can to help share your story too.
Connect with me: LinkedIn: https://www.linkedin.com/in/mark-russo-60a46912/
ChatGPT generated or not, I had a situation like this too with another large platform. It's an issue I would like to see discussed more, whether this article's case is fake or not.
Most likely it's both real and LLM generated. As in they gave their case, asked the LLM to write this article, did some very minimal editing and copy-pasted.
Doesn't matter how they wrote it, they put their name on it so it should be treated as if they wrote it themselves.
Google suspended my payments account a few months ago without even notifying me. I never received a reason for the suspension, but I suspect it's related to a failed game refund from Stadia, as I see a refund error in my payment notifications. Dealing with Google Support has been a Kafkaesque loop where I have to explain the same thing over and over, only to get the same scripted instructions that take me nowhere. After this dance, they finally say they will "escalate" the issue and then close the case. At this point, I've given up and am in the process of de-googling my life.
Good public warning.
But still, "unzip random NSFW content onto Google Drive" doesn't sound risk free does it
It doesn't sound risk free, but in a reasonable world, the risk would just be accidentally downloading a virus or something and having to wipe your PC, not being unpersoned for life by Google.
I think at the very least, Google should offer a paid service where you can actually talk to someone who'll actually look into it.
Even if it's $1000 a case, people will often still pay it, and that'd nullify the "scalability of customer service" crap.
The name "Google drive" implies it's like a hardware disk: unaware of even the filesystem, much less the files, stored on it. Most users likely think of it that way and don't notice until they accidentally trigger things.
The word Google in that name implies that it is Google's
People have been saying “The Cloud is just someone else’s computer” for decades. We still apparently have not fully internalized this fact. It’s only your data if it’s on your metal, in your physical possession.
"Casio" in "Casio watch" doesn't imply that the watch is owned by Casio.
You also don't log into the Casio watch, located at a Casio facility, remotely.
If you have anything even remotely important tied to your email address… then at least get your own domain name associated with it. It’s not a 100% guarantee that things won’t go wrong, but at least you can recover if your current digital feudal lord turns their ire on you.
I was lucky enough to have had my (first - pretty nice little common username) Gmail account summarily culled towards the early years of my email usage. I was young and I hadn't used the email anywhere where it could get critical - I don't think I had anything critical in life at that time. Besides, my country hadn't moved to emails for personal communications and interactions - it never did, it just teleported into instant messaging.
I was never given a reason. I tried to reach out and, of course, we know how it ends (even then). The thing is, I didn't even use it for anything other than sending emails to friends who were starting in other colleges and kind of just using emails for the sake of using emails. It was the new tool for me. Except one - the teenage me was in long and cosy exchanges with a nice someone many states and thousands of kilometres over talking about Jane Austen and Tolstoy and their works that we both read and loved and what not and also sharing with each other things I now definitely would not call poetry. That still feels like a loss - even after some two odd decades. The silliest thing - I didn't remember the email. Those were the good old days of r1d1clulux_paynthr_56789_b0mb@rediffmail.com. We never asked or revealed each other's names. Those were days like that when you didn't have to worry about whether you were talking to a cat or a fish.
I started using other email services (Yahoo, Hotmail - for a long time those were my main emails) and when I started working I got a domain and moved to a paid email host.
This also taught me a lesson about using free services. Hell, even when using a paid service this can happen. Apple is an example. You feel Google does it, oh boy oh boy, Apple knows how to do the true stonewalling! When you are on the phone with a real human being and that human being stonewalls you and their company (Apple) doesn't even allow that human being to help you, or escalate, or move up in the support chain, you feel that is real something - esp. if you are in a country where consumer laws are less than jokes! Anyway, so that taught me to be ready, to have backups (not just as in data, but as in options), and fallbacks.
I think everyone should experience things like this, but kinda early in life :)
PS. Naah, OP's case isn't like mine. But then people like me (and maybe OP and maybe you) allowed and enabled (still do) Googles and Apples of this world to be this big that they can just do it and get away with it and it doesn't even matter even in countries where consumer laws have real functioning teeth. So that's there.
All evidence to date forces the conclusion that trusting Google for anything important is tremendously foolish. That includes email, cloud-hosting, search, google apps of any kind, etc.
Don’t download porn datasets to Google drive.
Sticking what is functionally a mountain of porn onto Google cloud drive…wow
Unfortunately that it got csam flagged and rubbish support options is classic Google but still a pretty bold move on authors part
This is why you either are a good cloud provider and don't put your users under surveillance or you have a Google cloud provider.
Although this is to a large degree a legislative issue as well. The general idiots in politics problem.
Should have remembered to use Incognito mode, everyone knows that you can't use your main browser for ... research.
Why did people suddenly start to call CP CSAM? Did I miss something?
Have you considered creating a PWA?
I know. They've been doing this for ages. It's very hard to convince people something like this can happen to them until it does.
“Trusted cloud”
“Lost everything”
“I made no backups”
It’s becoming a common lament.
Folks, please note you need backups of data if losing it would be a problem.
That is all.
That and less shitty hosters like Google. There are countless alternatives that don't put private data under any scrutiny.
This wasn't just data loss and wouldn't have been prevented by having backups. In particular, note that he can't receive new emails or publish updates to his apps anymore. And even if it were just data loss, it's still entirely Google's fault, and victim blaming to suggest otherwise.
They probably paid google for their cloud backup services.
All professional and personal eMail through gMail?
Oof, buddy. That cock-up is on you. Even if you don’t want to administer your own iron, there are plenty of third-party services that can host your eMail domain.
And with a little work, there is eMail-in-a-box for a turnkey solution, and others like hMailServer if you just want a minimalistic low-effort server running on an old Windows box in your basement.
No it's not. The absolute vast majority of professional and personal emails go through the big 3, Gmail, Yahoo, msn/hotmail/outlook. What we need is better laws to ensure email is treated similar to utilities with strong consumer protection and appeal system, not victim blaming.
I think this is vastly different in countries outside the US, where self hosted mail servers are still very common.
Which countries are you thinking about? Honestly haven't seen a company in the EU self hosting email for probably 15 years, and I used to run the email server at a company.
Self-hosted mail servers are not common anywhere. Smaller providers are more common in some places. Small provider isn't the same as self-hosted; neither is enterprise.
There are still countless exchange servers running in the default enterprise MS setup. Perhaps not for long since MS nudges people into their cloud, but they are still fairly common.
[dead]
Not surprised.
Google clearly states CSAM is forbidden on their platform.
The user stored CSAM on Google Drive. Regardless whether it is for academic research or not - which in this case, it wasn't. It was for training a model.
Do you really think Google wants to be on the front page of the newspaper saying it allows users to store CSAM?
The user has been caught off guard and that's on them.
And yes, you're not safe either if you store CSAM on Google. Who in their right mind thinks they are?
Edit: Grammar
CSAM is the author's baseless speculation, but I could find no evidence suggesting NudeNet contains any. That it's hosted on GitHub, all its files are on archive.org, and is a widely used data-set 6 years old by now, all indicate that it doesn't contain CSAM.
In general, when a company does something hostile and unreasonable, let's not invent out of thin air facts to excuse their behavior, shall we? Especially since their stonewalling is deliberate.