• koolba 6 hours ago

    Way too risky to use Google services like this tied to your primary account. There’s too much risk of cross damage. Imagine losing access to your Gmail because some Gemini request flags you as an undesirable. The digital death sentence of losing access to your email with a company that notoriously has no way for the average human to contact a human is not worth the risk.

    • aprentic 8 minutes ago

      That's a big part of why I switched to paid email.

      I'm the customer, not the product.

      • tjoff 5 hours ago

        Use a custom domain and don't use google for email.

        And if you do use your gmail address just forward it and start to transition to something else. With time everything of importance has been transferred.

        • aliljet 5 hours ago

          How do you even pull away from a Gmail address? I'm nearly twenty years into that service. Getting banned would be absolutely devastating...

          • calcifer 5 hours ago

            Use your own domain to sign up for a paid email service, provided by a company that focuses on email. I use Fastmail, but there are many other options.

            Set up forwarding in Gmail to your new address.

            Then, whenever you log in to a website or app with your Gmail, take a moment to change it to your new address. In a few weeks, most of your important accounts will be covered. In a few months, almost everything you still actively use will be done.

            I did this ~5 years ago and the only thing that still arrives at my Gmail is spam.

            • caseysoftware 3 hours ago

              Same here but ~8 years.

              You can mitigate/speed the process using your password manager too.

              I still use a filter in my email so that if something comes in under my Gmail, it gets a special tag that I can filter on and treat those as a todo list. Rarely happens beyond the occasional Google Meet connection.

              • wafflemaker 2 hours ago

                For quite some time (approx 8 years) I've used an email forwarding (Blur, but any works) to avoid spam.

                This looks like perfect case for change of email, since lot of these accounts can be moved out from Gmail by changing the address that email is forwarded too.

                Looks like all this hassle with generating a new email for each service pays for the second time (by ease of changing the main mail), in addition to spam and privacy protection.

                • genxy 4 hours ago

                  Solid advice, but I want to double, watch out for things you only log into once a year.

                  Making a new local account on your machine is a good first step.

                • ptero 3 hours ago

                  Register your own domain, use a third-party provider to handle actual sending and receiving (I use proton, which makes the setup very easy), forward your Gmail to your personal domain address and as renewals and reminders come in switch your email on services to your personal domain.

                  After a year or two losing Gmail becomes an inconvenience; after a few more years it is nothing. As everything is now on your own domain name you can switch providers without affecting anything.

                  That's what I did about 5 years ago and my only regret is not doing it earlier.

                  • ikidd 4 hours ago

                    I just sold a domain I had for 25 years and used for everything including API endpoints, email, authentication, etc. It took a couple weeks to transition myself and my family/friends.

                    Pretty sure just moving emails would have take a lot less effort. I had the advantage of keeping the domain until I was ready to move, now imagine Google just turned it off one day and what your workload would be. I shudder to think about having to deal with that.

                    • ok_dad 2 hours ago

                      Just start changing addresses. Forward the rest. It takes about a year. Changing your name is way harder and tons of folks do that all the time.

                      • benhurmarcel 29 minutes ago

                        I just went through all accounts in my password manager, logged in and changed my email. It takes a little while but not that much.

                        • simonjgreen 2 hours ago

                          It will never be easier than right now. Every day you stay, you dig their moat around you even deeper

                          • cube00 5 hours ago

                            Get your own domain so you can easily change providers in the future. Start with your password manager and change the address on all the accounts you have in there.

                            After a few years you'll notice you stop bothering to check your Gmail and you can delete it to close the address.

                            If you need motivation, skim the /r/GMail subreddit and see how many people are getting locked out daily.

                            • 8cvor6j844qw_d6 4 hours ago

                              Do you have a recommendation for a major email provider as a fallback if you have to pick one?

                              I vaguely recall encountering a service that only accepted addresses from a whitelist of big providers (Gmail, Yahoo, Outlook, etc.), even @icloud did not qualify.

                              • JoshTriplett 4 hours ago

                                That's a service that doesn't want your business. If you care, message them about it

                                I've never once run into a service with such a restriction, but I can imagine someone being that short-sighted. I have seen services that only support "log in with Google or Facebook", which is comparably terrible.

                                • genxy 4 hours ago

                                  Discogs will not let me login with my own domain (of 30 years) and required one of the big providers. It kept complaining about "risky domain". But that is the only incident I can think of.

                                  • CamperBob2 an hour ago

                                    Discogs

                                    Who? Never heard of them, and it sounds like there's a good reason for that.

                                  • sir0010010 3 hours ago

                                    I've run into services that will flag specific tlds as invalid.

                              • ForHackernews 2 hours ago

                                Sign up at fastmail.com, set up forwarding, change your "reply-to" address. A year later, you'll have nothing arriving in gmail except marketing cruft.

                                • gmerc 4 hours ago

                                  took about 30 minutes to switch to proton mail

                                  • 8cvor6j844qw_d6 5 hours ago

                                    Same. I still have an old Gmail address that receives forgotten but still considered important emails from various services.

                                    What's the playbook for migrating away in this situation?

                                    • cube00 5 hours ago

                                      Companies need to allow you update your personal information including your email. It may need tickets to support but it's doable.

                                    • Hikikomori 5 hours ago

                                      Just have to get started and suffer for a while and make it a practice to switch emails when you log into places.

                                      I switched to fastmail with my own domain.

                                      • 8cvor6j844qw_d6 4 hours ago

                                        I went with SimpleLogin.

                                        Although I am increasingly concerned with its longevity since there's a non-zero risk that Proton might shut down SimpleLogin since Proton Pass has its own alias feature.

                                    • rzerowan 3 hours ago

                                      There was a time back when we could get generic LoginWIth OAUTH butons along with the social media roster , allowing one to use whichever provider they wanted.

                                      Current state of OIDC should be pretty much standard across most providers - it put it that devs need too make the push to support alt login providers for preventing vendor lockin in identity like were currently barreling towards in hardware/software.

                                    • gman83 5 hours ago

                                      This wasn't due to some random Gemini request. Users were using sketchy antigravity auth plugins to use their antigravity tokens on things like OpenClaw, clearly against ToS. It's great that Google is giving these users a second chance.

                                      • amiga386 5 hours ago

                                        Yes, our masters once again embarrass us unworthy peons with their endless grace, generosity and forebearance. How lucky we are to entrust our data and our lives to them!

                                        • WarmWash 5 hours ago

                                          Anyone can buy the tokens via the API and do whatever they want with them.

                                          Its not evil of Google to say "Here is an allotment of steeply discounted tokens, but you can only use them with our services."

                                          • fooker 3 hours ago

                                            It is evil to block your email and hold your photos hostage over it though :)

                                            • WarmWash 2 hours ago

                                              They only blocked access to Antigravity and GeminiCLI for the offense.

                                              • joquarky 2 hours ago

                                                I would question the judgment of anyone who thought they would maintain "don't be evil" beyond IPO.

                                                • ZekeSulastin 3 hours ago

                                                  Didn’t they only block Antigravity though, leaving other services available?

                                              • GaryBluto 4 hours ago

                                                https://youtu.be/ntICHMV-WMA?t=40

                                                "Google Shuts Down Gmail For Two Hours To Show Its Immense Power"

                                              • exitb 5 hours ago

                                                If a 3rd party product advertises compatibility with a Google service and you use it to login via a first party Google login page, doesn’t the responsibility fall somewhere between the offending product and Google itself? In practice it’s structured pretty much like a phishing attempt.

                                                Notably some model providers explicitly allow that very flow, while others will ban you without notice.

                                                • n8m8 5 hours ago

                                                  If the "3rd party product" is you selfhosting FOSS, then that's you (OpenClaw users)

                                                  • exitb 4 hours ago

                                                    Why do you call it self-hosting? It appears to be installable app with a fancy homepage. At what point does the software being covered by an open license changes the responsibility model?

                                                • zarzavat 5 hours ago

                                                  Okay but they were paying customers paying $$$ for the service. Banning your customers without prior warning is not right, however sketchy their behaviour might appear. Even if it's obvious to Google that there's a difference between a Gemini API key and an Antigravity API key, it's not necessarily obvious to others.

                                                  The correct and sane thing to do is to send them an email, with at most a 24 hour suspension. If they keep doing it despite being warned then by all means fire them.

                                                  • crawshaw 5 hours ago

                                                    The concern is not losing access to some new IDE for operating outside the terms of service. The concern is when you lose access to the IDE, you also lose access to your 20 year old Gmail account.

                                                    A general problem for Google products is that everything is mixed together.

                                                    • BoredPositron an hour ago

                                                      But that's not what happened.

                                                    • johnebgd 5 hours ago

                                                      It’s be great if Google just revoked antigravity access if terms were violated. No need to disable the entire account.

                                                      • LiamPowell 5 hours ago

                                                        > just revoked antigravity access

                                                        That's exactly what they did, plus Gemini CLI and Code Assist, which are the same product in different formats.

                                                        • NewsaHackO 3 hours ago

                                                          No Google account has been banned for this. People just keep spreading this lie because no one agrees that they have the right to steal the OAuth token.

                                                          • joquarky 2 hours ago

                                                            "steal" is semantically incorrect here.

                                                            • sneak 3 hours ago

                                                              It's their OAuth token, it's not being stolen. It's just being copied from one place on their computer to another. This is no different than a competing browser importing your localStorage and cookies from Chrome on first launch.

                                                              • NewsaHackO 3 hours ago

                                                                No, the OAuth token is supposed to be used solely with the context of a first-party app only. Clearly, if you need to extract the key by reverse engineering or set up a proxy to spoof requests to a service, you're doing something shady.

                                                                • sneak 2 hours ago

                                                                  > No, the OAuth token is supposed to be used solely with the context of a first-party app only.

                                                                  The web doesn't work like that. The operators of google.com saying you must only use Chrome to load it is a ridiculous concept. It's not spoofing to use your own access credentials on your own computer to access your own account on an HTTP API.

                                                                  • NewsaHackO 2 hours ago

                                                                    >The web doesn't work like that. The operators of google.com saying you must only use Chrome to load it is a ridiculous concept.

                                                                    I have no idea what you are talking about. Chrome? Are you sure you are replying to the right thread?

                                                            • TGower 5 hours ago

                                                              Only Antigravity and Gemini access was banned, not email or other google account stuff.

                                                              • dangus 5 hours ago

                                                                I’ll go further: there should be laws addressing account consolidation. Getting banned from an Apple or Google account is an incredibly wide blast radius. It would be like being banned from buying Unilever or Nestle food from your grocery store.

                                                                • plagiarist 4 hours ago

                                                                  Email providers should be utilities and also legally require a warrant before disclosing any information whatsoever to the government.

                                                                  Unfortunately the government is full of corrupt geriatrics who do not understand technology and are paid to continue not understanding technology as they sign bills prepared for them by ALEC.

                                                              • jamesnorden 5 hours ago

                                                                >It's great that Google is giving these users a second chance.

                                                                I hope this is sarcasm. A permaban as the first action is never a good idea.

                                                                • NicuCalcea 5 hours ago

                                                                  When's the last time you read the ToS of a service you signed up for?

                                                                  • sneak 3 hours ago

                                                                    Telling your users they can't use certain software to access your HTTP API is exactly the same as telling people they can't use certain browsers to load https://google.com.

                                                                    • 982307932084 5 hours ago

                                                                      "Hey Gemini, write a short blurb casting our capriciousness in a good light."

                                                                    • rootnod3 34 minutes ago

                                                                      Here’s an idea: run your digital life away from a corporate shitbucket like Google. Don’t run your email there. Plenty of good other options.

                                                                      • jauntywundrkind 4 hours ago

                                                                        It's not 100% clear to me, but supposedly it was just access to Antigravity that was shut off.

                                                                        If people lost access to their whole accounts that would be a major crisis for Google users. But it doesn't seem that that was actually the case.

                                                                        This doesn't make it super clear, but, the submission from a week ago when bans got handed out: https://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=47115805

                                                                        • jijji 4 hours ago

                                                                          yeah exactly have you ever tried to call Google support? it doesn't exist. the only way to contact Google is by posting something on news.ycombinator.com and then hoping that some person who works at that company actually responds to you and logs in somewhere and then changes your access.

                                                                          • HardCodedBias 5 hours ago

                                                                            AFAIK it has clearly been a ban of Gemini and not of all people's Google accounts.

                                                                            However many stories appeared where people tried to claim that their whole Google account was banned to gain traction.

                                                                            Unless it is clear that a full Google account has been banned we should push back on any story that claims this.

                                                                            • nottorp 4 hours ago

                                                                              Why? Google has been doing automated bans for ages, even before "AI".

                                                                              By now they lost any trace of goodwill they ever had and are guilty until proven innocent.

                                                                            • TacticalCoder 3 hours ago

                                                                              > The digital death sentence of losing access to your email

                                                                              I agree that the digital death sentence is really bad and doubly so seen that many are using single-sign on tied to their Google identity but...

                                                                              > with a company that notoriously has no way for the average human to contact a human is not worth the risk

                                                                              There's definitely phone support for paying Google Workspace users: don't tell me there's not, my wife got Google support on the phone more than once and they've been helpful.

                                                                              And it's not a crazy expensive subscription either.

                                                                              • ithkuil 2 hours ago

                                                                                This remains a problem for the personal account though (arguably what "primary account" meant in GP)

                                                                                • stavros 2 hours ago

                                                                                  Can that account be upgraded to Workspace just to get the support?

                                                                            • cube00 6 hours ago

                                                                              Over the past week,

                                                                              A week? Try at least 16 days

                                                                              https://discuss.ai.google.dev/t/account-restricted-without-w...

                                                                              The danger here is they'll ban you with no specific reason, fill out the form and you get an automatic unban and then something else automatically flags and you're banned the second time permanently.

                                                                              Support bot will then say "you were warned, read the TOS" and you get to guess what you did wrong.

                                                                              You'll notice there are no appeals or reviews in this workflow.

                                                                              Google has no creditability when it comes to handling account bans.

                                                                              • clickety_clack 5 hours ago

                                                                                People are crazy to use Google as the core of their online identity.

                                                                                • oofbey 5 hours ago

                                                                                  Ex googler here. It is based on Google’s fundamental disdain of customers. Googlers are repeatedly told by management that they are the smartest people in the world and that their time is too valuable to spend on silly things like helping customers.

                                                                                  • jijji 4 hours ago

                                                                                    Google has zero customer service. using them for anything serious makes no business sense. the only thing that they're good for is serving ads to people, and they have a support team for that, but only if you're spending a lot of money, and even then good luck finding it

                                                                                  • jascha_eng 6 hours ago

                                                                                    I still kinda wish that the subscriptions would just allow you to use the tokens however you wish. I get that they rely on people not using all of their quota. But e.g. with open code it doesn't really matter if I use antigravity or gemini-cli the usage should be about the same.

                                                                                    What they are actually trying to force you to do is to pay for the tokens that you don't use in their applications to increase their revenue and/or give their in-house tools an "unfair" advantage. But this is bad for the consumer because it means that there is less competition between coding agents and unless I'm willing to pay per token I have to take one of the model labs agents.

                                                                                    Anticompetitive behaviour imo they could just ban reselling tokens or something like that instead of locking your subscription in like this.

                                                                                    • gruez 5 hours ago

                                                                                      >I still kinda wish that the subscriptions would just allow you to use the tokens however you wish. I get that they rely on people not using all of their quota. But e.g. with open code it doesn't really matter if I use antigravity or gemini-cli the usage should be about the same.

                                                                                      This is almost as realistic as "I wish netflix or youtube allowed me to use VLC to watch their content".

                                                                                      • nottorp 4 hours ago

                                                                                        Haha maybe that would reduce piracy.

                                                                                        The easiest way to watch a movie in the player of my choice - even if i have legal access to it because it's in my netflix subscription - is to download it off piratebay.

                                                                                        Add to that Netflix's shitty discovery system, I'm pretty sure I watched some downloaded movies in spite of actually having legal access to them.

                                                                                        Oh, remember when PC games used to come on disks? For the Netflix example I can only guess, but I'm 100% sure I downloaded isos for games I had actually bought and had the physical disc... somewhere.

                                                                                        • throawayonthe 3 hours ago

                                                                                          i don't believe this is a significant driver of piracy tbh, normal people don't care about that kinda thing :P

                                                                                          especially considering most modern movie/tv piracy is free streaming websites - shitty quality and awkward player controls, definitely no choice of player here

                                                                                        • raincole 3 hours ago

                                                                                          This is almost as realistic as "I wish OpenAI supports using OpenCode with ChatGPT subscription account."

                                                                                          Oh, except they do[0].

                                                                                          [0]: https://x.com/thsottiaux/status/2009742187484065881

                                                                                          • NewsaHackO an hour ago

                                                                                            Yea, there are the last to the party (have they even arrived?), so they are going to have to make some concessions. I wonder if they at rollout will have a third-party subscription token service in addition to their first-party one.

                                                                                            • raincole 30 minutes ago

                                                                                              > there are the last to the party

                                                                                              Anecdotally, I'm having a very hard time imagining there are more Gemini Cli users than Codex users.

                                                                                          • plagiarist 4 hours ago

                                                                                            I do wish that though. I have given up on streaming services, I am not paying for this bullshit experience. We used to have all the content unlimited on one service for like $10/mo. I can accept prices increasing with inflation but society should not accept such a backslide in service quality.

                                                                                          • NitpickLawyer 5 hours ago

                                                                                            > I get that they rely on people not using all of their quota

                                                                                            They have no problem with users using their quota on their own software. Because they get the signals. They do have a problem with users using the API in 3rd party software, because they don't get the signals.

                                                                                            • falcor84 5 hours ago

                                                                                              Well ... the clear signal is that people want to use Google's models but not Google products

                                                                                              • theblazehen 5 hours ago

                                                                                                Most people have actually just been using Opus through antigravity

                                                                                                • falcor84 2 hours ago

                                                                                                  That's very different from what I'm seeing around me, but yes, I suppose that happens to. And I guess Google wouldn't have as much of an issue with that, right?

                                                                                                  • theblazehen an hour ago

                                                                                                    Ah, in my spaces (Involved in the proxy dev), most people have been using it for Opus. I suspect they may even have more of an issue with it, as they don't get the cost advantage of serving an in-house model

                                                                                              • xiphias2 3 hours ago

                                                                                                I don't really understand this reasoning actually:

                                                                                                if OpenClaw usage go up, and a service (OpenAI it looks like) gets lots of usage data for personal assistent usage, they can optimize to make it better for people who get a $200 subscription just because of that use case.

                                                                                              • bluecalm an hour ago

                                                                                                I think the deal is quite clear: subscription for personal usage in their products, API token for everything else. You get a rebate for subscription because they get the data. I would be quite sad if they removed the subscription option just to not be "anticompetitive".

                                                                                                • Analemma_ 5 hours ago

                                                                                                  > But e.g. with open code it doesn't really matter if I use antigravity or gemini-cli the usage should be about the same.

                                                                                                  This is not at all true. What is prompting this behavior from Google and Anthropic is that people are using their oauth creds/API keys to run OpenClaw bots that use orders of magnitude more tokens than the IDEs. The official clients also can use a lot more prompt caching because they have expected workflows.

                                                                                                  And like, if you want to run OpenClaw, they’re not saying you can’t do that: use the API pricing, that’s what it’s for. But people are getting mad that they’re not allowed to roll their pickup truck up to the all-you-can-eat buffet table and fill it.

                                                                                                • hsaliak 2 hours ago

                                                                                                  The Gemini-CLI situation is poor. They did not communicate that AI Pro or AI Ultra accounts cannot be used with this API broadly earlier. I specifically remember searching for this info. Seeing this made me wonder if I had missed it. Turns out it was added to the TOS 2 days ago - diff https://github.com/google-gemini/gemini-cli/pull/20488/chang.... I'd be happy to stand corrected here.

                                                                                                  Anti Gravity I understand, they are subsidizing to promote a general IDE, but I dont understand constraining the generative AI backend that Gemini CLI hits.

                                                                                                  Finally, it's unclear what's allowed and what's not if I purchase the API access from google cloud here https://developers.google.com/gemini-code-assist/docs/overvi...

                                                                                                  The Apache License of this product at this point is rich. Just make it closed source and close the API reference. Why have it out there?

                                                                                                  • tempest_ an hour ago

                                                                                                    I have a Code Assist Standard license to evaluate gemini-cli (and the new models)

                                                                                                    To this day I cannot coax the gemini-cli to allow me to use the models they claim you have access to. Enabled all the preview stuff in cloud etc etc.

                                                                                                    Still I mostly get 2.5 and rarely get 3 or 3.1 offered.

                                                                                                    The gemini-cli repo is a shit show.

                                                                                                    I can seem to access the new models using opencode, but am 429 rate limited almost immediately such that its like 5 minutes between calls.

                                                                                                    • hsaliak 41 minutes ago

                                                                                                      It takes your query, computes the complexity of the request, and tries to route it to the appropriate model. There is a /manual command i think, to pick the right model.

                                                                                                      They mask the 429s well in Gemini-Cli - if an endpoint is rate limited, they try another, or route to another model, etc to keep service availability up.

                                                                                                      Your experience on the 429s is consistent with mine - the 429s is the first thing they need to fix. Fix that and they have a solid model at a good price point.

                                                                                                      I use my own coding agent (https://github.com/hsaliak/std_slop) and not being able to bring my (now cancelled) AI account with Google to it is a bummer.

                                                                                                      I'd still use it with the Code Assist Standard license if the google cloud API subscription allows for it but I have no clarification.

                                                                                                  • gck1 3 hours ago

                                                                                                    > Using third-party software, tools, or services to harvest or piggyback on Gemini CLI's OAuth authentication to access our backend services is a direct violation of Gemini CLI’s applicable terms and policies.

                                                                                                    It's been 2 months since these bans have started, first Anthropic, then Google. And their wording is still so confusing that I can't get a simple answer to a simple question:

                                                                                                    Is piggybacking on headless 'gemini-cli -p' or 'claude -p' a TOS violation? Because there's really no reason why you can't do exactly what these tools did that caused these two companies to start giving out bans.

                                                                                                    Unless you're in for a very specific configuration of models for some niche concern, CLIs give you nearly exact same access to the backend that snatching an OAuth token from them does. They give you JSONL for stdin, JSONL for stdout, and if you spin up a local proxy, you even get the same exact API contract in responses that you get from public APIs.

                                                                                                    In fact, I already built a small tool for myself that does exactly that, to allow usage of alternative harnesses I prefer. Once I release it to the public, will -p be banned too?

                                                                                                    • blainm 3 hours ago

                                                                                                      I think the issue is people are using tools in an automated fashion and running up a compute bill for free when they were only meant to be used by humans in a more limited capacity (for companies to gather data on how to improve their products for humans). I think the correct way to use these models in an automated fashion is via the APIs and even then they might also worry about things like abuse/distillation type attacks still if the volume is too high. I think the lack of transparency might actually be by design so that people abusing their services don't figure out what triggers them losing their accounts. I could be wrong of course, this is just speculation on my part.

                                                                                                      • gck1 3 hours ago

                                                                                                        > I think the issue is people are using tools in an automated fashion

                                                                                                        But that's the sole reason why all of the tools have headless modes. Headless mode is textbook definition of supporting automation.

                                                                                                        From gemini docs: [1]

                                                                                                        > Headless mode allows you to run Gemini CLI programmatically from command line scripts and automation tools without any interactive UI.

                                                                                                        And claude code:

                                                                                                        > Use the Agent SDK to run Claude Code programmatically from the CLI, Python, or TypeScript

                                                                                                        Why does headless mode exist if using it is a bannable offense?

                                                                                                        [1] https://google-gemini.github.io/gemini-cli/docs/cli/headless...

                                                                                                        [2] https://code.claude.com/docs/en/headless

                                                                                                        • szmarczak an hour ago

                                                                                                          Headless is fine as long as there's a human in the loop. Remove the human, their bills skyrocket.

                                                                                                      • NewsaHackO 3 hours ago

                                                                                                        Have you read the website? https://platform.claude.com/docs/en/agent-sdk/overview

                                                                                                        >Unless previously approved, Anthropic does not allow third party developers to offer claude.ai login or rate limits for their products, including agents built on the Claude Agent SDK. Please use the API key authentication methods described in this document instead.

                                                                                                        Seems clear-cut to me.

                                                                                                        • gck1 2 hours ago

                                                                                                          Yes, I have. And it's obvious that restriction was put there for a reason. The most obvious possible reason is that snatching OAuth made it possible for third party tools to utilize subscription to the fullest - like OpenClaw.

                                                                                                          But these tools, including openclaw, didn't have to snatch the OAuth tokens, they could have used claude code built in headless stdio and consequences for Anthropic would be exactly the same. OAuth was just faster to plug in.

                                                                                                          So if I open source my solution that allows opencode & openclaw to go through claude cli's headless mode, is this allowed? Is this a product that allows claude.ai login?

                                                                                                          What if I open source a 1 line bash loop (e.g. ralph loop) that does the same?

                                                                                                          What if I build a more complex bash loop that goes through my tasks in a text file, and calls claude cli for each?

                                                                                                          I don't know at which point this becomes "offering claude.ai login" or a "product", or "building agents".

                                                                                                          Here's my product:

                                                                                                          while :; do cat PROMPT.md | claude ; done

                                                                                                          Am I blacklisted now?

                                                                                                          • szmarczak 2 hours ago

                                                                                                            They just want people to pay more via API. Technically, your example would violate ToS, because the purpose matters. Like a license file may allow personal use and prohibit commercial use (unless you obtain a commercial license).

                                                                                                            • NewsaHackO 2 hours ago

                                                                                                              Before I use time responding, I want to ask again: Did you actually read the website, especially the "Compare the Agent SDK to other Claude tools" section? It answers your question pretty thoroughly.

                                                                                                              • gck1 41 minutes ago

                                                                                                                For the second time, yes. And it's still not clear at what point does a wrapper around claude cli running in headless mode become a 'product' that is going to get my account banned.

                                                                                                                My guess is, and others have said this as well in the thread: "when you start utilizing your weekly quotas fully".

                                                                                                                But obviously, they can't put "you can't use your weekly allocated quota fully". That would be way too honest and we can't accept that.

                                                                                                                • NewsaHackO 19 minutes ago

                                                                                                                  No, the link clearly says that if you are not using the harness provided by Claude for the Agent SDK (such as for making tool calls), you have to use the Client SDK. So attempting to prompt the Agent SDK with a third-party app so that the third-party app can then call a tool with the output is not allowed in the Agent SDK. You have to use the Client SDK (API).It even gives an example in the section I asked you to read, which is why I am seriously doubting whether or not you read it.

                                                                                                        • RyanShook 5 hours ago

                                                                                                          What I don’t understand about policy violations is why Google never warns the user before banning. A simple alert or email would reduce so much frustration on the part of users and so much overhead for Google.

                                                                                                          ToS change frequently and it’s not really fair to assume the user knows what is and is not correct use of tokens.

                                                                                                          • solfox 5 hours ago

                                                                                                            Not just Google. This seems to be the default for most tech giants. I was banned on Facebook for an unknown reason, not provided any explanation, and given zero recourse. Had to resort to reaching out to a friend who worked there.

                                                                                                          • sidewndr46 4 hours ago

                                                                                                            Why is this published on github.com? Is google somehow incapable of making official announcements through their own web properties?

                                                                                                            • writeslowly 4 hours ago

                                                                                                              It’s interesting that with both Anthropic and Google we’re seeing them develop agentic models that are supposed to do anything a human can do on computers without human intervention, but at the same time, if you plug one program into another of their programs or APIs in a way that wasn’t preapproved you may be blocked or banned.

                                                                                                              To be charitable, maybe they’re expecting AI agents to eventually start reading the ToS docs

                                                                                                              • consumer451 6 hours ago

                                                                                                                Just wanted to say that Windsurf is chugging along just great. No drama for users, excellent outputs at low cost. I am confused why they are not used more widely.

                                                                                                                • WarmWash 5 hours ago

                                                                                                                  The problem wasn't antigravity, the problem was funneling clawdbot tokens through it (with a 3rd party plugin) to skirt API costs.

                                                                                                                  • johnebgd 5 hours ago

                                                                                                                    We use them as well. Great product.

                                                                                                                  • iepathos 6 hours ago

                                                                                                                    Refreshing response from Google especially given the incompetence with which Anthropic has handled bans.

                                                                                                                    • fsalbrechter 5 hours ago

                                                                                                                      Still no clarification if they block your whole Google account or just Gemini?

                                                                                                                      • Thorrez 5 hours ago

                                                                                                                        Not the entire Google account.

                                                                                                                        > bans for Antigravity usage also blocked access to Gemini CLI and Gemini Code Assist.

                                                                                                                        Disclosure: I work at Google, but not on anything related to this.

                                                                                                                      • narmiouh 5 hours ago

                                                                                                                        I see a lot of comments in googles defense, part of me wonders whats the split between google employees(even so people in teams related to these products) and normies who ignore the true underlying issue here…

                                                                                                                        Google consistently fails to provide a process to deal with user issues. You donot see many reports of these at Amazon, Microsoft, Apple, and many more providers. Though Meta learns from google I think.

                                                                                                                        • cube00 4 hours ago

                                                                                                                          Microsoft has a had a few high profile cases of locking people out and taking their OneDrive with it with no ability to get support.

                                                                                                                          • TacticalCoder 3 hours ago

                                                                                                                            > Microsoft has a had a few high profile cases of locking people out and taking their OneDrive with it with no ability to get support.

                                                                                                                            Yes but as we're talking about Microsoft, these cases are probably explained by incompetence.

                                                                                                                        • ankit219 3 hours ago

                                                                                                                          this is good.

                                                                                                                          problem is google's security concerns. when people connect gmail to openclaw, google flags the activity as weird and suspend the account because of unusual activity. Many whose accounts got locked because of this and they thought it was because they connected it to antigravity use against the policy (which happened in some cases). We will still see google account suspensions, and that would keep making news. and it wont be because of antigravity usage.

                                                                                                                          • esskay 5 hours ago

                                                                                                                            All this whole thing did is ensure I never, ever use any google AI service. The fact that they didn't instantly comprehend what a total account ban means when they've got people with 20+ years worth of personal data in those accounts is incredibly concerning.

                                                                                                                            • cogman10 6 hours ago

                                                                                                                              This is the correct way to handle this situation.

                                                                                                                              • sergiotapia 5 hours ago

                                                                                                                                Complete risk to use google products like this with your real account. My youtube is still banned over uploading two clips of Dexter's Laboratory over 15 years ago.

                                                                                                                                Today I could have uploaded them fine, and let whoever owns the cartoon make money I was just a fan of the show.

                                                                                                                                • cat_plus_plus 3 hours ago

                                                                                                                                  The problem is that Google treats its customers as college kids who can be banned from a college maker lab for using too much 3D filament rather than entrepreneurs who are trusting their livelyhood to a service provider that promises to be reliable. If War Department uses too many Gemini tokens, do they cut them off, make them go through recertification process and permaban the next time around?

                                                                                                                                  Which means that anyone serious about AI and not going local route should be using a provider with better reputation. I don't know if Alibaba, Z.ai or moonshots AI are also known for hair trigger responses, could be decent options for coding AI otherwise? If not, time to look for smaller providers with good reputation?

                                                                                                                                  • TiredOfLife 2 hours ago

                                                                                                                                    Incompetence of Google is amazing. They take an existing thing like Windsurf and somehow make it constantly coredump. And can't fix it for months.

                                                                                                                                    • jijji 4 hours ago

                                                                                                                                      this is the long-standing problem with using Google services. either they become deprecated and removed without notification, or they outright ban you for using tools as intended. either way, using Google tools for anything doesn't make business sense to anybody who's seen the history of this.

                                                                                                                                      • MiscIdeaMaker99 5 hours ago

                                                                                                                                        I feel dumb. I've never heard of Antigravity until now.

                                                                                                                                        • gozzoo 5 hours ago

                                                                                                                                          Good for you :)

                                                                                                                                          • oofbey 5 hours ago

                                                                                                                                            Welcome to the singularity, now in progress. One of its defining features is that things move too fast for people to keep up.

                                                                                                                                            • pocksuppet 4 hours ago

                                                                                                                                              By this logic though JavaScript frameworks were the singularity

                                                                                                                                              • oofbey 4 hours ago

                                                                                                                                                lol. True. I guess the difference is “things that matter to technological progress” move too fast to keep up.

                                                                                                                                          • marcd35 5 hours ago

                                                                                                                                            cool. now do something about the hundreds/thousands of people getting rate limited on Antigravity even after upgrading their plans, even on their $250 /month plan.

                                                                                                                                            https://discuss.ai.google.dev/c/antigravity/64

                                                                                                                                            • chaostheory an hour ago

                                                                                                                                              > to address violations of the Antigravity Terms of Service (ToS), specifically the use of 3rd party tools or proxies to access Antigravity resources and quotas

                                                                                                                                              Translation: Google doesn’t want you using Gemini oauth with openclaw

                                                                                                                                              • xrd 6 hours ago

                                                                                                                                                Another recent concern on other posts here on HN is whether a private company should have veto power over the US government. Or, another way to look at it, whether the US government should be able to designate a company as a supply chain risk and ban them from most business in the host country.

                                                                                                                                                If I squint at the conversation, it doesn't seem that different from a behemoth company taking an employee of a private company and forcing them to still stop working for arbitrary reasons.

                                                                                                                                                I'm giving agents and coding tools wide berth here, but if AI is going to replace all employees, what guarantees do you have as the employer that your employees will do your bidding, and not the bidding of enterprises with a shifting moral landscape?

                                                                                                                                                Once we have tooling wrapped around specific agents, it'll be hard to rehire. What will we do then when our "employees" are furloughed?

                                                                                                                                                This will be especially relevant when the big AI labs decide they need to enter a market to justify an obscene valuation. Or, when the sovereign wealth fund decides they don't like the direction of a business.

                                                                                                                                                This is a good and honorable decision by Google. But it also brings up scary times ahead.