
The new storage policies will also affect Google Workspace subscribers, and G Suite for Education and G Suite for Nonprofits, which the company detailed in another blog post. And existing Drive files also won't count unless they are modified on or after that date. That is as much as I can gather.There's an exemption for existing high-quality photos and videos that are backed up before June 1.

There is a quota - I think it is 20,000 a day - of free API calls after which they will charge you for using the API. You will need to identify the url for page that you are calling from as part of your client credentials in the Google console - otherwise the request will be denied. the API request does not seem to need any particular scope and there is none in the API call in the code. But if you are not using a Google login for your page anyway - why would you want their thumbnail? Because the image URL is available from the basic user profile. The Client ID is available from the cloud console as documented on the link - I think you need to create a project to create the credentials but if you are not using it they will not charge you so that is not a problem.The user does need to be logged in - if not this code will log then in. just using the Key and not the ClientID) to zero. It does not seem to work just with an API Key - from the responses I was getting they have set the quota for unauthenticated access to the API (I.e. You need a Google OAuth2 client id - see for the details. Url = user.getBasicProfile().getImageUrl()

Note: This service is based on an independent library called Pikmail that can be used as a Gradle dependency in your java projects(servers or Android apps).

Java Android free to contribute with you pull requests, open bugs or request new features here. Here is the blog post about how Pikmail API works internally.
