Illustration of a happy US user changing Gmail username on laptop, showcasing Google's new feature without data loss.
Illustration of a happy US user changing Gmail username on laptop, showcasing Google's new feature without data loss.
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Google rolls out Gmail username changes for US users

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Google has widely rolled out a feature allowing US-based Google Account users to change their Gmail username without losing data, adding the old username as an alternate address. One change is permitted per year, following initial reports of the feature earlier.

Building on initial reports from late 2025 about a support page hinting at Gmail address changes, Google began widely deploying the feature on March 31, 2026—coinciding with Gmail's 22nd anniversary on April 1. Previously tested for months, it enables US users to update the part of their address before @gmail.com directly in account settings: navigate to Personal Info > Email > 'Change Google Account email.'

The rollout is gradual, so the option may not appear immediately; Google advises waiting if unavailable. Changes are limited to once every 12 months, likely to curb spam. All data—emails, photos, Drive files—remains intact. Emails to the old username continue arriving, and login works with either. The new username becomes primary for services like Gmail, Maps, YouTube, and Play, though some third-party apps may lag.

The old username persists as an alternate for reversion, though managing multiples is unclear. Chromebook users should log out/in post-change, back up files, and reconfigure Remote Desktop. Google did not comment.

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Reactions on X to Google's Gmail username change feature for US users are largely positive and excited, with users relieved to update embarrassing old addresses without losing data. Official announcements from Sundar Pichai and Google garnered massive engagement, highlighting flexibility and aliases. Humorous posts joke about it arriving before GTA 6 or renaming gamer tags. Some skepticism notes potential issues with OAuth logins and linked services. Journalists shared guides neutrally.

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Illustration of a person checking their phone for a spoofed call warning on Android, highlighting Google's new deepfake detection feature.
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Google adds detection for spoofed calls to Android phones

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Google is rolling out a new feature to Android devices that detects impersonation scams involving spoofed calls. The update targets the rising threat of AI-generated deepfake voices in financial fraud. It begins deploying this month on phones running Android 12 and higher.

Google has started a gradual rollout of a tool that lets users in Brazil change their primary Gmail address without creating a new account or losing message history.

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WhatsApp is introducing usernames to let users connect without sharing phone numbers. Reservations open this week for the Meta-owned app's three billion users.

Google has begun rolling out vertical tabs and an enhanced reading mode for its Chrome browser on desktop. Users can access vertical tabs by right-clicking a window and selecting 'Show Tabs Vertically,' allowing fuller tab titles and easier management. The reading mode offers a distraction-free, full-page interface via right-click.

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Google has released an update for its Nest Wifi router, the first in 18 months. The move comes ahead of a looming US router ban. However, the update falls short of competing with routers from Asus and Netgear.

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