• @DreadTowel
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    11 year ago

    Why is that a fault in logic? The features are orthogonal. One doesn’t restrict the other. All other, normal, email providers allow client side gpg use.

    • @[email protected]
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      31 year ago

      What is the benefit to using your own key on top of protons encryption? Why not just use your own encryption with any other provider?

      • @DreadTowel
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        11 year ago

        One less email to have? Wdym???

    • Dark Arc
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      21 year ago

      Put another way…

      You went to a custom shoe maker and said “make me a custom shoe” then you went back to them and said “I wanted to do it myself! Why won’t you let me change out the insoles in these shoes!”

      • @DreadTowel
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        -11 year ago

        Yes, what’s the problem with that? Services should provide as much flexibility as possible.

        • Dark Arc
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          11 year ago

          That mentality is part of the problem. More options is not inherently better, it’s more to maintain, more complexity, more feature requests in that direction (“well can I store a PGP key in the browser that isn’t uploaded to your servers so I can read my non-synced PGP mail”, “can I write mail using that”, “oh I changed my mind, can I convert mail to your PGP key from my PGP key”, “oh I changed my mind again, I’d actually like all my emails changed to my PGP key”, “oh could you sync my PGP key for me”, etc).

          It happens all the time, bending over backwards as a company for niche customers that want to use your toaster as a waffle iron rarely works out well.

          • @DreadTowel
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            -11 year ago

            It’s a simple ask, not bending over backwards. I bet they haven’t touched the email encryption part of code in years, so it doesn’t add any maintenance burden either. I’ve looked at what they do - the only thing they’d need to change is their handling of email headers!

              • @DreadTowel
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                -21 year ago

                Sounds more like an attempt to kill off gpg to win the market.

                • Dark Arc
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                  11 year ago

                  Jesus, they literally use GPG and integrate with 3rd party GPG. How did you make that leap?

                  • @DreadTowel
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                    -21 year ago

                    Internally, yes. So, they only allow it if it’s under their control. This wouldn’t be a customer servie nightmare because only people who know how to use it would use it. Plus, their version of PGP doesn’t encrypt the subject.