Gmail finally answers users’ prayers with this long-awaited upgrade
Never again will your inbox be plagued with an onslaught of spam, newsletters or marketing emails.
At long last, the tech giant announced that its newest Gmail feature will allow users to declutter their inboxes with ease.
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The latest feature allows patrons to manage barrages of unwanted emails en masse and unsubscribe from an auto-detected list of recurring senders with one quick click.

Domain users will find the ‘Manage Subscriptions’ button in the top-left navigation and menu bar, which opens a subsection that features the sender list. From there, one click on the envelope icon on the right will prompt Gmail to send an unsubscribe request to the sender, removing you from any future mail.
Keep an eye out for the brand-new ‘Manage Subscriptions’ button — in its announcement, Gmail said that it is currently rolling out on web, iOS, and Android in “select countries.”
Over on Reddit, some Gmail loyalists are already complaining about Google’s slow rollouts.
“By the time you actually get it, you’ve completely forgotten about it. The excitement becomes an annoyance, and then you stop caring,” observed one commenter.
Another expressed how useful the feature will be, and lamented they didn’t have access to it sooner.
“I had to write a Google App Script to figure out who is spamming me and at what rate, and then I deleted all such emails, around 80K, and unsubscribed from hundreds of domains,” shared the user.
Gmail-related scams have become increasingly more common — and sophisticated — in recent years, prompting developers to implement AI-based security defenses that slash potential scam emails by 35%, according to the tech company.

Typically, spam and scam emails come from pretty conspicuously fake addresses, but one recent phishing scam from May 2025 saw hackers attempting to impersonate official Google accounts to obtain users’ login credentials and other personal information.
At the time, a Google spokesperson told The Post the company was aware of the issue and addressing it with additional security measures, but also said that it “encourages users to adopt two-factor authentication and passkeys, which provide strong protection against these kinds of phishing campaigns.”
As highly anticipated as this new feature is, it has some users wondering how long it will be before scammers and retailers advance their email tactics and breach the already beleaguered inbox again.
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