![]() ![]() ![]() Since I live in Seattle and the nearest Panda Express is several miles away, I’m completely confused. Tineye confirmed that it’s a photo from Panda Express used onĪ site promoting downtown Chicago. The privacy policy notes, “Gboard will remember words you type to help you with spelling or to predict searches you might be interested in.” It also seems to have a mighty dictionary, far better than other keyboards I’ve tried. Google says that besides search, it doesn’t send anything you type back to Google. GBoard offers search suggestions based on what you’ve typed, but only when you tap the G icon. These searches don’t sync with other Google products you use, so you won’t see them appear elsewhere. You can also wipe the search history from Gboard at will. Google says it only sends the searches you perform by tapping the G icon, which makes sense: Obviously it needs the text of the search to perform it. Privacy statement about Gboard-you can find it under the Search History and Privacy section, tap Privacy. But you can dig into two related aspects: what a company says it will do with your keystrokes, and which keystrokes you choose to tap into that keyboard. Is it risky to give Google-or any company-access to all your keystrokes? Sure. With Google involved, many people expressed joking or serious concern that Gboard might give the search company even more information about their personal behavior. ![]()
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