As someone who has read plenty of discussions about email security (some of them in this very community), including all kind of stuff (from the company groupie to tinfoil-hat conspiracy theories), I have decided to put too many hours some time to discuss the different threat models for email setups, including the basic most people have, the “secure email provider” one (e.g., Protonmail) and the “I use arch PGP manually BTW”.

Jokes aside, I hope that it provides an overview comprehensive and - I don’t want to say objective, but at least rational - enough so that everyone can draw their own conclusion, while also showing how certain “radical” arguments that I have seen in the past are relatively shortsighted.

The tl;dr is that email is generally not a great solution when talking about security. Depending on your risk profile, using a secure email provider may be the best compromise between realistic security and usability, while if you really have serious security needs, you probably shouldn’t use emails, but if you do then a custom setup is your best choice.

Cheers

    • @[email protected]
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      5 months ago

      It would sound better as one of the following:

      • An attempt at a comprehensive…
      • An attempt to create a comprehensive…

      I don’t think it’s grammatically incorrect (native speaker, but not a grammar expert), it just sounds odd.

      • @wazoobonkerbrain
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        25 months ago

        I considered recommending “attempt at” but “an attempt at a model” still sounds weird. OP went with “to create” which sounds better 🙂

    • @wazoobonkerbrain
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      15 months ago

      It does. How about

      An attempt to summarize a comprehensive threat model for emails

      Or, in place of summarize - define, or outline?