When assigning permission to Google Groups, an error "Failed to register users" shows up. Not sure what is wrong behind the scene.
As we do want to centralize our user management using solely Google Identity (https://groups.google.com/). Is there a way to do it?
Thank you,
Most likely the problem is that the email address needs to be either a google business account, or a #gmail.com address.
Quite frustrating that google doesn't tell you this in the error message, and they've closed any threads when people ask on their forms, but hopefully this saves people a few minutes / hours / days of googling.
Related
I am creating a project to be able to share a Calendar among some users.
The strange thing is that when one of the users wants to connect, the following error appears telling him "This app isn't verified"
https://prnt.sc/p87wvm
I am not a programmer so it is difficult for me but I think I am doing everything right.
The only api that I am using is that of Google Calendar.
The email with which I am creating the Api is a #gmail.com
https://prnt.sc/p88o0g
I am not using any special scope that requires some type of verification.
I did not exceed any quota limit or anything like that.
And the send to verification button is disabled and tells me that my changes do not require verification
I want any user with a Gmail email to connect to the calendar
What i need to do??
For the doubts I have verified the domain thinking that it was that but it did not solve the problem either
I'm very new to online analytics. I just deployed a site a few days ago, told no one, and Google Analytics is saying I have hundreds of users and sessions all over the world.
Even if events are logging from my own development, there shouldn't be so many users (and so many sessions...I'm not developing THAT vigorously.)
Also, my server logs indicate the level of activity I expect: ~0. So it's not like I'm magically getting traffic somehow. It really is nonexistent.
What could be going on? I can understand seeing a few sessions here and there, for web crawlers, but I don't understand why the numbers are so high.
Any common gotchas?
I realize this is a vague question, but I'm not sure what other information to provide, so please let me know what I can do to help.
Traffic source
First check, if traffic comes through your website (through your analytics.js library). To do this, just remove analytics.js for a while and check, if traffic is still going into Google Analytics (e.g. Realtime report).
If is still going, maybe somebody use Measurement Protocol to spam your account.
To prevent this, add, for instance, custom parameter into your call and create filtered view only for this. All without this param, throw away.
Check sessions and returning visitors
Check, if the traffic is random (usualy one pageview per session) or if the behavior of users is normal.
Custom client ID
Check if you dont play with client ID in analytics.js configuration. IF you dont have random number generator there.
Check traffic source (referal), browsers
If there is one significant, or there is some pattern in versioning (absolute randomness is pattern too)
Preventing random access through website
For every visitor who is first-time on your page, set up a cookie with current timestamp. If cookie is not older than e.g. hour or day, do not track this user. Or buffer hits and fire them later after you prove the user is real.
Anyway, if you have some new hints or information from your analysis, we should help you better. This is still like reading a magic sphere :-)
Good afternoon,
I just started with a new company and need to remodel our website. Within the Code their is a tracking ID for Google Analytics, but unfortunately nobody can remember what the account names are. Is there any way that I could use my tracking ID, which includes my Account number according to my research, to get to my account name?
Thank you very much to everybody who is putting in some effort to help me.
jonny.
You can use the Google Analytics Account Explorer to search for all accounts you have access to.
If you have access to this account, you'll be able to find the account name by searching with the tracking ID. If nothing shows up, find someone you know has access and have them search.
I am consulting with a group that has several users on their GA account. How can I see the scheduled email each person set up to make sure they're correct and do I can assist them when they have problems?
If it can't be done, can someone please point me to an official Google statement saying it can't be done?...at least that way I can tell my boss :)
Thanks!
That cant be done. As to pointing you to Googles Statement of why it cant be done the only thing I can give you is the current documentation for the API.
IMO this feature would be located in the Management API probably under User permissions but i'm not really sure that's the best place for it either.
User Permissions - Developer Guide
I feel this is a very good idea and added it to my long list of feature requests feel free to star it. Manage Scheduled Emails Now I'm not sure they will add it I think they may decided that there is to grate a spam risk with this. But we will have to wait and see.
Tell your boss that its not currently available in the Google Analytics API but a feature request was made.
Click on the gear icon in the bottom left, then on the bottom right under 'Personal Tools & Assets', you should see Scheduled Emails. They're only visible with the view they're attached to, so if you have multiple views, you'll need to look through each one.
I posted this on Google's help forums, but I still haven't gotten a response, so I thought I'd try it here;
I work for a web development company with 200+ active clients. We are in the process of setting up Google Analytics tracking for each of their websites. We have already created a Google account for each of our clients, and we are attempting to manually sign each one up for GA. We haven't gotten very far in creating new GA accounts, after creating a few accounts, we are required to use text-message verification to create the accounts, and after a few more, we are unable to create any new accounts at all.
We are following the recommendation of Google's Help Article found here:
http://www.google.com/support/analytics/bin/answer.py?hl=en&answer=55601
We are a legitimate business trying to set up analytics for legitimate customers. At this point we can't create a single new GA account, but we still have 182 clients that we have promised to set up with GA, plus any new customers, all of which we intend to set up with GA. We've clearly been flagged as a robot by Google's system, which is totally understandable given the volume of accounts we are creating, but we are not using any robots, we have a person sitting at a computer manually entering all of the information for each of our clients.
Does anyone have any ideas or a solution?
Are you logging in as a different client each time in order to open the new account?
If so, try logging in as yourself and creating each new accounts in your profile. Once created, add your client as a user (report or admin level).