In a blog post, Google Cloud addressed the now more than 50 percent of Americans who work from home due to the novel Coronavirus pandemic. This is, according to a recent Vice News report. There are also millions of others who work from home across the planet, and Karthik Lakshminarayanan, Director of Product Management, G Suite Security & Controls, broke the news of the platformβs sweeping set of overhauls, which include a redesigned unified user interface along with a breadth of new security functionalities. Lakshminarayanan added:
βToday weβre announcing new updates that provide even stronger security in Gmail, Meet, and Chat. Weβre also unveiling new ways to help IT, admins, to manage and secure devices in the Admin Consoleβ
Hereβs why most think Google Cloudβs looking to further compete with Slack and Zoom, itβs new controls for Meet, formerly known as Google Hangouts. The video collaboration tool is free of service, and one that connects millions worldwide. βIn the coming weeks, weβll start rolling out new security controls to help ensure that only intended participants get let into a video meeting. In the initial rollout, these options will be available for consumers and G Suite for Education accounts.β
Lakshminarayanan continued, stating, first, the company will give meeting hosts increased control over who can join their meetings. These enhancements build on existing Google Cloud technology that requires those who do not appear on a meeting calendar invite to ask to join the meeting via a feature that mocks knocking on a door.
βOnce an attendee gets ejected, they canβt attempt to join the same meeting again by βknocking,β unless the host re-invites themβ
If a request to join a meetingβs denied many times, that userβs automatically blocked from sending more requests to join. Meeting hosts also gained the use of advanced safety locks to beef up security with a few clicks. With G Suiteβs latest Safety Locks feature, hosts can decide which methods of joining (via calendar invite, phone, etc.) require users to gain approval to join.
New security features for Chat, Google Cloudβs Slack-like team collaboration app are here to stay, according to Google Cloud, βWeβre extending the strong phishing protections we have built within Gmail to Chat. If a linkβs sent to you via Chat, itβs checked against real-time data from safe browsing and flagged if itβs found to be malicious.β In the coming weeks, G Suite users can report and block Chat Rooms if they suspect malicious activity. New security features will even enable the automatic detection and limiting of what Google classifies as βabusive contentβ. This means spammy invitations could get classified as such, and in some cases, be blocked automatically.
To streamline the process of device management, G Suite underwent a redesign. The devices page in the G Suite admin console includes more intuitive navigation for device management and it displays the number of devices managed by each service. Thereβs even a new integration with Apple Business Manager (formerly DEP) that lets G Suite Enterprise, G Suite Enterprise Essentials, Cloud Identity Premium, and G Suite Enterprise for Education admins to distribute and manage company-owned Apple iOS devices.
Keeping sensitive data protected and private can prove a challenge for any size organization, which is why Google Cloud said it made some essential changes to its Data Loss Prevention feature that hopes to prevent unauthorized access to data. βAdmins can now use automated information rights management (IRM) controls to prevent data exfiltration by blocking end users from downloading, printing, or copying Google Drive documents, sheets, and slides that contain sensitive content.β

Available in beta for G Suite Enterprise, G Suite Enterprise Essentials, and G Suite Enterprise for Education customers, controls work in tandem with the Data Loss Prevention rules set for organizations. βAdmins can run a full scan of all files within Google Drive and automatically enable these controls for all users.β G Suiteβs also made it simpler for admins to control app access. Admins can already decide which third-party apps can access usersβ G Suite data with OAuth 2.0. In light of recent updates to its App access control, users can block apps from accessing G Suite services via APIs, too.
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