Users can now change their email address—with limits—while keeping their account history intact. It’s been an outrageously long wait, but Google will finally allow Gmail users to change their email ...
For years, the conventional wisdom was that once you picked a Gmail handle, you were stuck with it for life or forced to ...
Google introduces new Gmail account recovery mode. Updated October 19 with a new lock screen recovery feature specifically for Android smartphone users, as well as a warning from Check Point Software ...
The procedure is fairly easy to follow. First, go to your Google Account page. From the Google homepage in your computer ...
Google started quietly rolling out the change late last year in India, and it has now announced it’s available for all Google ...
It’s about time. On Tuesday, Google announced it will now allow U.S. users to change their Google Account username without opening a new account or losing access to their data. Translation: you’re no ...
Google now allows Gmail users to change their email address up to 3 times while keeping all stored data, ending years of being stuck with cringey usernames.
You’ve probably had the same Gmail address for years. Now, it’s easy to make a name change without worrying about the ...
If you have an old Google account name that makes you wince, you're in luck: Now you can change it. Here's what to know.
Gmail users can now change their email usernames, a feature rolling out after two decades. This update allows users to switch to a more suitable @gmail.com address while retaining their existing ...
Update, Dec. 16, 2024: This story, originally published Dec. 14 now includes additional advice on how to securely recover a forgotten username and password to an inactive Gmail account to prevent ...