Gmail promo for Priority Inbox creeps out Chrome users
- 01 September, 2010 03:43
- Comments
Chrome users yesterday bombarded Google's Gmail support forum with complaints about music suddenly playing in the background when they reached their inboxes.
Some feared that their machines had been infected with malware.
"Those sound effects are quite unnerving when you first hear it," said a user identified as "goz3" on the Gmail support board . "I really thought it was some sort of twisted virus."
"I thought it was a virus, too," echoed "bradleyctclarke" on the same thread.
The cause, said a Google representative on the support forum, was a video promoting the e-mail service's new Priority Inbox feature.
Although the Google support rep said that the company was "working on fixing this" and apologized for the bug, Computerworld confirmed that the background video and its ragtime-style music was still affecting Chrome users on Tuesday.
Other browsers, such as Safari and Firefox, did not automatically fire up the video and its tune.
"I thought my account had been hacked -- especially when I heard the scrunching of paper," added goz3 in an earlier message Monday. "I thought, oh sh*t, my mail is being eaten up."
The unwanted music played only on machines running Chrome, and then only for users who have had the Priority Inbox feature enabled by Google. The new tool, designed to automatically rearrange messages to put the most important at the top of the inbox, is being rolled out in stages by Google, which yesterday said that it would reach everyone within the next week.
The gaffe is reminiscent of one Google made last May when a JavaScript-based version of the 1980 video game Pac-Man freaked out Firefox users , who heard siren sounds and offbeat music in the background when they were at the search engine 's home page.
"MAKE IT STOP!" shouted someone tagged as "bleepo" on Monday. "If I get some annoying sound or ad every time I open Gmail on Chrome it will be enough to make me not use it."
To quell the music, Chrome users should click on the Priority Inbox link in the upper right, then stop the video play in the pop-up window.
Some Chrome users thought their machines were infected with malware when Gmail suddenly started playing music.
- Bookmark this page
- Share this article
- Got more on this story? Email TechWorld
- Follow TechWorld on twitter
- Security threat report 2011
- Why Hackers have Turned to Malicious JavaScript Attacks
- ALM Buyers Guide: A Practical Guide to Choosing the Right Agile Tools for your Team
- Improving Productivity in the Connected Enterprise Through Collaboration
- Forrester Research | Your Enterprise Database Security Strategy 2010
-
Droid Razr Maxx: An Android smartphone for big talkers
-
Lenovo ordered to pay €1920 for making French laptop buyer pay for Windows too
-
Wikileaks suspect to face US court-martial
-
Wikileaks suspect to face US court-martial
-
Telstra reports issue with BigPond email accounts
-
VBscript Programmer's Reference, Second Edition
-
Access 2000 Programming for Dummies
-
The Internet Gigabook for Dummies
-
Securing Scada Systems
-
Managing and Maintaining a Microsoft Windows Server 2003 Environment for an MCSE Certified on Windo Ws 2000 (70-296)
-
Ivor Horton's Beginning Visual C++ 2005
-
Expert SQL Server 2005 Integration Services
-
C Programming
-
Learning to Program with Visual Basic.NET











Comments
Post new comment