• @[email protected]
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    133 months ago

    You can use your own GPG key (https://proton.me/support/importing-openpgp-private-key or using the bridge), whatever tool does the signing needs the key (duh) so I am not sure what you mean by “they store your private key” (they stored it encrypted as per documentation https://proton.me/support/how-is-the-private-key-stored), their AI was specifically designed as local, exactly to be privacy friendly, plus is a feature that can be disabled (when it will reach general subscriptions).

    I don’t care about cyptocurrencies, but I suppose they started with the most popular, nothing to do with privacy as they just let you store your currencies.

    Anyway, use what you like the most, of course, but yours don’t look very solid motivations, quite a lot of incorrect information, I hope you didn’t take your decision based on it.

    • asudox
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      3 months ago

      You upload your private key to the cloud. Encrypted or not, this is a bad idea. No thanks. I can do the signing locally and then I’ll do the decryption with my own private key locally without them storing it as well.

      Edit: mixed public keys with private keys

      • @[email protected]
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        83 months ago

        You upload your private key to the cloud. Encrypted or not, this is a bad idea.

        An encrypted key is a useless blob. What matters is the decryption key for that key, which is your password (or a key derived from it, I assume), which is client side.

        They can do the signing and encryption with my public key

        They can’t sign with your public key. Signing is done using your private one, otherwise nobody can verify the signature.

        Either way:

        and then I’ll do the decryption with my own private key locally without them storing it.

        You can do it using the bridge, exactly like you would with any client-side tooling.

        • @[email protected]
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          33 months ago

          It’s still insecure. They decryption process is still in the proton company hands and they could add some client specific code to log the password on the fly. Proton is obliged to follow the swiss law and I can imagine situation that police asks proton (+ gag order ) to log certain data for specific clients like passwords and ips. Still private keys are better to be stored separately. You can sync them easily if you with with either rsync or rclone

          • @[email protected]
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            43 months ago

            It’s not “insecure”, it’s simply a supply chain risk. You have the same exact problem with any client software that you might use. There are still jurisdictions, there are still supply chain attacks. The posture is different simply by a small tradeoff: business incentive and size for proton as pluses vs quicker updates (via JS code) and slower updates vs worse security and dependency on a handful of individuals in case of other tools.

            Any software that makes the crypto operations can do stuff with the keys if compromised or coerced by law enforcement to do so.

            In any case, if this tradeoff doesn’t suit you, the bridge allows you to use your preferred tool, so this is kinda of a moot point.

            The main argument for me is that if you rely on mail and gpg not to get caught by those who can coerce proton, you are already failing.

            • @[email protected]
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              13 months ago

              I used bridge for many years. It was totally unusable - 1) you cannot delete emails with it ( deleted emails were coming back ), 2) synchronization issues so it made me move to another “plain and simple” email provider offering pop3 and imap and also gpg integration ( but without that e2e hype talk )

              • @[email protected]
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                13 months ago

                I can’t comment on this, since I don’t use the bridge for a while. But it’s just an IMAP/SMTP server, so not sure why certain features wouldn’t work. What service did you end up using which has gpg integration?

                • @[email protected]
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                  33 months ago

                  I used protonmail for 3 years - bridge issues have been being ignored by protonmail support in my opinion. “Clean cache and try again”. I stopped using protonmail and switched to mailbox.org. So far so good.

                  • @[email protected]
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                    13 months ago

                    From what I read though, the GPG security model for mailbox.org is the same as it is for Proton webmail (except for the browser plugin, where the difference is not really there). I like mailbox.org, to be clear, but I don’t get how it is an alternative to the bridge.

          • asudox
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            33 months ago

            Exactly. There’s no justification for them storing the private key online for “convenience”. And key generation happens in the browser with JS. Which means it is possible to send backdoored JS to easily copy the private key.

            • @[email protected]
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              33 months ago

              There is a reason: simplicity. Either you do all the key management yourself, which in practice means 98% of the people won’t do it at all, or you implement a solution like they did and increase the risk of a small % (see my other comment) but you cover every customer.

              • asudox
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                3 months ago

                That simplicity introduces security and privacy issues.

                • @[email protected]
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                  43 months ago

                  Introduces some risks in terms of security. Privacy concerns are extremely minimal, because in any case you don’t control the setup of your other interlocutor(s).

                  Considering that the realistic alternative is not using anything at all and the fact that you have both options with Proton, it’s a win-win scenario.

                  • asudox
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                    3 months ago

                    One of the biggest risks is when someone knows your password. Your PGP encrypted emails that you want noone to see will be available to the attacker. Whereas if no such thing happened, the attacker wouldn’t be able to decrypt the PGP encrypted emails even if the attacker gained access to your account. Manually encrypting your stuff is better than having some random on the internet do it for you. It’s really just a tradeoff. Convenience or security? It’s not even hard to manually encrypt emails.

            • @[email protected]
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              23 months ago

              endof

              Especially with the fact that: 1) deminificafion of the javascript code is not simple 2) you cannot “freeze” the code version you use. Still your computer does allow it ( minus the windows which follows the Microsoft thinking way, kidding about windows updates )

        • asudox
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          13 months ago

          Yeah mb. Mixed private keys with public keys. Edited original comment.