

Harrdy Sandhu checks out Samsung Galaxy Buds2 Pro.Honor Play 6C with Snapdragon 480 chipset launched in China.Coin Master: OctoFree Spins and Coins link.Explained: Samsung’s Offline finding for Galaxy smartphones and how it can help find your lost smartphone.MediaTek announces new Dimensity 1080 chipset: Key specs and features.These Samsung foldable smartphones are selling at a 'never-before' price.For items in shared drives, the shared drive manager will receive the notification The owner of the item in Google Drive will receive an email notifying them of the action taken, and alerting them of how to request a review of the restriction if they think it is a mistake.

When it’s restricted, you may see a flag next to the filename, you won’t be able to share it, and your file will no longer be publicly accessible, even to people who have the link. What is the new Google Drive policy When a Google Drive file is identified as violating Google's Terms of Service or program policies, it may be restricted. TechRadar claims that Google provided a statement on the incident where it agreed that the issue impacted a small number of Drive files and it has corrected all known cases where files were incorrectly flagged for violating Google’s Copyright Infringement policy. However, Google engineer Misha Brukman replied on Dolson’s Tweet assuring to resolve the issue. As reported by The Register, Google didn’t even offer a way to request a review of the document to revoke the decision despite the company claiming that users can request a review. Emily Dolson, an assistant professor at Michigan State University, the tech giant even flagged a text file that contained just a single numeric character. According to a report by The Register, Google Drive is revoking access to files that are innocuous. Now, it appears that Google still has some work to do on the new feature as the AI system that recognises the suspicious content seems to be flagging wrong files. Under the new policy, the tech giant can automatically flag and restrict access to the files that violate its abuse policies.

Last month, Google announced an updated policy for its cloud storage service, Google Drive.
