I want to raise one concern regarding the lack of this feature. If your email (gmail) account itself is breached, a malicious actor can use ANY alias they can think of to send and validate email access. If combined with quick deletion, its very probably the user will never even know (ever) of its existence.
That alone should warrant this feature.
That said, We could also ask Google to provide clear auditing on all email aliases ever used/seen. But I doubt they would do that. It could easily become a "spam" problem inside their gmail DB.
Just like they offer the last 10 IP/login accesses, they could include the last 7 days of email aliases used in (inbound) emails. There are a lot of emails, and so making this a time window list ensures a user has the opportunity to see entries before they disappear. Not sure Google is taking FR's for gmail, but maybe some folks could push for something like this?
I want to raise one concern regarding the lack of this feature. If your email (gmail) account itself is breached, a malicious actor can use ANY alias they can think of to send and validate email access. If combined with quick deletion, its very probably the user will never even know (ever) of its existence.
That alone should warrant this feature.
That said, We could also ask Google to provide clear auditing on all email aliases ever used/seen. But I doubt they would do that. It could easily become a "spam" problem inside their gmail DB.
Just like they offer the last 10 IP/login accesses, they could include the last 7 days of email aliases used in (inbound) emails. There are a lot of emails, and so making this a time window list ensures a user has the opportunity to see entries before they disappear. Not sure Google is taking FR's for gmail, but maybe some folks could push for something like this?