Google says Gmail is rolling out a new way to verify the authenticity of a sender: a blue checkmark next to the organization’s name.

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It can help you tell the impersonators and phishing attempts from missives from the real McCoy

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“We introduced the verified checkmark as yet another layer of protection against malicious and unwanted emails,” Google said in a statement to USA TODAY. 

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“Seeing the checkmark should give users increased confidence that their email is from a legitimate source.”

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Not everyone has these checkmarks, only organizations that adopt the BIMI (Brand Indicators for Message Identification) security system, which Google has supported since 2021.

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Before, if an organization used BIMI and authenticated with Google, Gmail would display its logo.

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Now a blue checkmark shows up next to the organization’s name.

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FTC wants to bar Facebook parent Meta from monetizing young users' data So far, companies like Apple and Amazon are using the Gmail checkmark.

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“Thousands of companies have already adopted this open verification standard, and we expect many more to join in coming days, Google told USA TODAY.

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