Strong passwords help protect your accounts and information on the web. But forgetting your password is like losing your keys—you can end up locked out of your own home.
It gets worse if your password gets compromised or stolen. Sometimes the thief will change your password so you can't get back into your own account—kind of like someone stealing your keys and then changing the lock.
If you've lost your Google password, you need a way to get back into your Google Account -- and back to all of your stuff in Gmail, Maps, Google+ and YouTube. To help you, Google needs to be able to tell that you’re the rightful account owner even if you don't have the right password.
There are a few easy steps you can take right now to make it easy for you—and no one else—to get into your Google Account if you forget or don’t know the password.
1. Add a recovery email address. By registering an alternate email address with your Google Account settings, you’re giving Google another way to reach you. If you forget your password, Google can send a link to that recovery email address so you can reset your password.
Google can also use that email address to let you know if we detect something suspicious happening with your account.
Setting up your recovery options can help you get back in if you get locked out of your Google Account
2. Add a phone number to your Google Account. Your mobile phone is the best way to regain access to your account if you forget your password. It's like the "fast lane" for account recovery: we text a code to the phone number you've registered with us, and you're back in business in no time.
Your phone is more secure and reliable than other means of recovering your account. Methods like “secret” questions (asking your mother’s maiden name or city where you were born) may have answers that are easy to remember, but they are also not that hard for bad guys to uncover.
And we’ve consistently seen that people who register a recovery phone are faster and more successful at getting their accounts back than those recovering their accounts via email.
You can also get a text message if Google detects that something suspicious is going on with your account. Giving a recovery phone number to Google won’t result in you being signed up for marketing lists or getting more calls from telemarketers.
3. Keep your recovery options up to date. It’s a good idea to check your recovery options every so often. For example, if you change your phone number after setting up your recovery options, take just a minute to update your recovery settings to match.
We'll remind you of your current settings every so often to make it easier for you to keep them up to date.
That’s it! You can either update your recovery options next time you’re prompted, or you can take two minutes to do it right now on our Account recovery options page.
For more advice on how to protect yourself and your family online, visit our Good to Know site, or check out some of the other posts in our series on staying safe and secure.
Taiwo Kola-Ogunlade, works in Google, Nigeria
Showing posts with label Google. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Google. Show all posts
Wednesday, 4 September 2013
Wednesday, 24 July 2013
Google has new tablet, new connection to TV
SAN FRANCISCO (AFP) - Google on Wednesday unveiled a slimmer, more powerful tablet computer on its Nexus brand and a thumb-sized device that lets popular mobile gadgets feed online content wirelessly to television sets.
The ramped-up second-generation Nexus 7 by Taiwan-based Asus made its debut along with a Chromecast dongle that plugs into television sets to let people easily route online content to big screens.
Mario Queiroz, head of Google TV, said Chromecast "won't clutter your entertainment cabinet. It simply disappears behind your TV once it is plugged in."
The new connector device went on sale for $35 online at Google play and will also be sold through Amazon and Best Buy in the United States.
"Cast" icons built into applications for online video services YouTube and Netflix let people use smartphones, tablets or laptop computers to easily direct online videos to television screens, a demonstration showed.
'If you know how to use YouTube on your phone, you know how to use YouTube on your TV," Queiroz said while describing the vision behind Chromecast.
"Any device in your home can become a remote control for the television."
Google also made available a software kit for developers to synch mobile apps with Chromecast. Online radio streaming service Pandora is among those with Cast application features "in the works," according to Google.
Google is also working to let people "cast" online content from Chrome web browsers to televisions.
Content fed to televisions is delivered directly through home Internet connections, with smartphones, tablets or laptops serving essentially as remote controls, according to Queiroz.
"We are paving the way for more apps to come," he continued. "Over time, we expect the technology to be embedded in a range of devices from our partners."
The Nexus 7 ramps up Google's challenge to Apple's iPad with a slimmer tablet to be easily slipped into a pocket or handbag and allow easy access to rich online content or services.
Nexus 7 is about two millimeters thinner and slightly narrower than its predecessor, which was released a year ago.
"It actually makes a huge difference when holding it in one hand; it fits more easily in a purse or jacket," Android vice president Hugo Barra said after pulling a new Nexus 7 from a rear pocket of his pants.
Nexus 7 has a high-definition screen and speakers that allow for virtual surround sound listening of films, games, or music.
Nexus tablets will be available in three models, all with seven-inch high-resolution screens. Two Nexus 7 models will connect to the internet just using Wi-Fi, while one will be synched to US high-speed telecom carrier networks.
Nexus 7 prices will start at $229 and top out at $349 in the US market.
Wi-Fi only versions will go on sale in the United States on July 30, with Nexus 7 tablets to be released in France, Australia, Britain, South Korean and a few other countries in "coming weeks."
Nexus 7 will be the first tablet powered by a new 4.3 version of the Android "Jelly Bean" mobile operating system.
"We from the Android team are investing a lot in tablets," said Sundar Pichai, who heads the Android and Chrome teams at Google.
"By our count, almost one in two tablets sold worldwide is based on Android."
More than 70 million tablets powered by Google's Android software have been activated worldwide, according to Pichai.
Prices are falling for most tablets as sales surge, with many analysts expecting tablets to outpace PC sales soon. ablet shipments are expected to grow 67.9 percent to 202 million units this year, according to a Gartner report.
The ramped-up second-generation Nexus 7 by Taiwan-based Asus made its debut along with a Chromecast dongle that plugs into television sets to let people easily route online content to big screens.
Mario Queiroz, head of Google TV, said Chromecast "won't clutter your entertainment cabinet. It simply disappears behind your TV once it is plugged in."
The new connector device went on sale for $35 online at Google play and will also be sold through Amazon and Best Buy in the United States.
"Cast" icons built into applications for online video services YouTube and Netflix let people use smartphones, tablets or laptop computers to easily direct online videos to television screens, a demonstration showed.
'If you know how to use YouTube on your phone, you know how to use YouTube on your TV," Queiroz said while describing the vision behind Chromecast.
"Any device in your home can become a remote control for the television."
Google also made available a software kit for developers to synch mobile apps with Chromecast. Online radio streaming service Pandora is among those with Cast application features "in the works," according to Google.
Google is also working to let people "cast" online content from Chrome web browsers to televisions.
Content fed to televisions is delivered directly through home Internet connections, with smartphones, tablets or laptops serving essentially as remote controls, according to Queiroz.
"We are paving the way for more apps to come," he continued. "Over time, we expect the technology to be embedded in a range of devices from our partners."
The Nexus 7 ramps up Google's challenge to Apple's iPad with a slimmer tablet to be easily slipped into a pocket or handbag and allow easy access to rich online content or services.
Nexus 7 is about two millimeters thinner and slightly narrower than its predecessor, which was released a year ago.
"It actually makes a huge difference when holding it in one hand; it fits more easily in a purse or jacket," Android vice president Hugo Barra said after pulling a new Nexus 7 from a rear pocket of his pants.
Nexus 7 has a high-definition screen and speakers that allow for virtual surround sound listening of films, games, or music.
Nexus tablets will be available in three models, all with seven-inch high-resolution screens. Two Nexus 7 models will connect to the internet just using Wi-Fi, while one will be synched to US high-speed telecom carrier networks.
Nexus 7 prices will start at $229 and top out at $349 in the US market.
Wi-Fi only versions will go on sale in the United States on July 30, with Nexus 7 tablets to be released in France, Australia, Britain, South Korean and a few other countries in "coming weeks."
Nexus 7 will be the first tablet powered by a new 4.3 version of the Android "Jelly Bean" mobile operating system.
"We from the Android team are investing a lot in tablets," said Sundar Pichai, who heads the Android and Chrome teams at Google.
"By our count, almost one in two tablets sold worldwide is based on Android."
More than 70 million tablets powered by Google's Android software have been activated worldwide, according to Pichai.
Prices are falling for most tablets as sales surge, with many analysts expecting tablets to outpace PC sales soon. ablet shipments are expected to grow 67.9 percent to 202 million units this year, according to a Gartner report.
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