Google announced the addition of OAuth support in Gmail in a blog post today, a highly positive move that allows you to give third-party applications access to the contents of your e-mail without having to give them your password. You may be familiar with the term from Twitter, who added OAuth support back in April of last year.

Besides making a more secure Gmail environment, the news could be even more significant if it inspires a flush of innovation from third-party developers to build custom applications on top of Gmail. Google itself occasionally adds experimental new functionality via Gmail Labs that users can opt into, but a secure OAuth sign-in platform could be a key feature that really promotes an explosion of Gmail apps from outside developers.

It remains to be seen if that Gmail app gold rush will take off, but at least one company is already taking advantage of the new OAuth feature. Syphir makes an iPhone application called SmartPush, which lets you define under what conditions an incoming e-mail should trigger a push notification on your phone.

As illustrated in the screenshot above, thanks to OAuth you don't have to give Syphir your Gmail password in order to access your e-mail. Online cloud backup service Backupify let us know they'll be adding OAuth support for their Gmail backup service as well beginning tomorrow.

What do you think: Will we see an explosion of third-party Gmail Apps emerge? What kind of apps would you want to see built on top of your e-mail?