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Though Google Cloud Next in Las Vegas was a couple weeks ago, I'm still working through it and trying to process everything I learned there. Three days, 32,000 attendees, 260 product announcements. One cool stand out...
Google shipped an entire agent accountability infrastructure at this conference. Every AI agent now gets a cryptographic ID and an auditable action trail tied to a defined authorization policy. They built anomaly detection that flags unusual agent reasoning in real time and maps it back to the source.
You build that when you're expecting things to go wrong at scale.
GE Appliances is deploying 800 AI agents across manufacturing and supply chain right now. That's operational continuity with autonomous software making decisions without a human in the loop.
Every enterprise leader needs to answer one question the technology doesn't answer for you: when an agent makes a decision that costs money or creates legal exposure, who owns it?
I'm looking forward to diving deeper into Gemini Enterprise and Chrome Enterprise. The Chrome Enterprise shadow AI reporting shows you every unsanctioned AI tool your employees are already using. You can't govern what you can't see.

https://cloud.google.com/blog/topics/google-cloud-next/google-cloud-next-2026-wrap-up

#AIGovernance #AgenticAI #GoogleNext #CIO #EnterpriseSecurity #security #privacy #cloud #infosec #cybersecurity #AI @google @googlecloud @googlecloudsec

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How me not cluttering my search history with stuff I don't want to see in there, is supposed help protect the community, the learn-more-link didn't explain, though.

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Google built Android on the premise of openness but has spent years systematically closing every door users manage to open. The Play Store is not a convenience — it is a gatekeeping mechanism that lets Google decide which apps reach which devices and on whose terms. Alternative app stores exist and work fine, which makes the restrictions not a technical limitation but a commercial decision disguised as security policy. Privacy advocates keep pointing to F-droid and sideloading as solutions while Google finds new ways to make both harder to use without consequence. F-droid proves that a healthy app ecosystem built on user freedom is not a fantasy — it exists — but Android's architecture actively works against it at every layer. Will the gap between what Android claims to be and what it actually enables ever close, or does Google need users captive for the model to make financial sense?

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Gmail has good news for anyone who regrets their email address.

For the first time in the platform's 22-year history, account holders now have the ability to change their Gmail address name. Previously, Gmail users who wanted to do so had to create a brand new account.

Google CEO Sundar Pichai shared the announcement in a post on X.

"2004 was a good year, but your Gmail address doesn’t need to be stuck in it. To say goodbye to v0t3f0rp3dr02004@gmail.com or mrbrightside416@gmail.com (or whatever you were into at the time), go to your Google Account settings and choose any name available. You’ll keep your old username and you can sign in with both," he said.

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