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nickjj an hour ago

I'd love to somehow do the opposite of this but I don't think it's possible? It would be deleting attachments from emails without deleting the email thread.

For example I'm always 1-2 GB away from my Google account being full. I've pruned Google Drive to the absolute bare minimum.

I've had my Google account for a really long time. There's tens of thousands of emails since day 1. However, there's many emails that have attachments.

For example my friends or someone might have sent me a bunch of images and there's a very long email thread going on with them. I want to delete the 300 MB of photos without deleting the email thread. I don't think Google has a way to do this. I'd easily be able to free up multiple gigs of space if this were possible.

I've already bit the bullet and deleted the biggest offenders but I have a ton of emails with 1-2 attachments (pdfs, zip files, some images, etc.) that might "only" be 15 MB but I definitely don't want to delete the email since it has a record of something. Not just the attachment but the corresponding email chain.

zazerr 42 minutes ago | parent [-]

I have the same issue and found this worked great https://unattach.com/ (no affiliation, just a user)

nickjj 25 minutes ago | parent [-]

Oh nice, if everything they say is true, this seems like a good match but it seems like it has 1 big potential downside.

THE GOOD:

Their FAQ says it uses OAuth to connect to your Google account and the emails never leave your browser.

It also costs 83 cents for 1 month so you can go nuts. Alternatively you can pay 1 cent per email if you have a handful.

I see another HN thread about it here from a few years ago: https://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=32462878

THE BAD:

I don't know if it can be used with total confidence because that HN thread makes it sound like they delete the original email and create a new email with the same meta data but some of the comments indicate that's not quite the same as the original. If you had to present this email as evidence, you could run into friction since the original no longer exists. Technically it looks like you can back the original up but as someone mentioned in a comment that seems like it would add a lot of friction in a legal case.

I have no intent on ever needing to use old emails with large attachments in a legal case but knowing this could be a problem makes me hesitant. Although on the bright side, it would be fine to use for anything you 100% know won't ever be used legally.