Will these emails be more secure?

  • dbx12
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    2111 months ago

    Not exactly. Maybe you benefit from an additional virus scan (if Proton does this). What you certainly benefit from is the “only load external resources when told to” feature. This prevents tracking since loading the external resource == the mail was opened.

    What exactly do you want to achieve in terms of security?

    • amigan
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      1911 months ago

      What exactly do you want to achieve in terms of security?

      I’m beginning to think many people here just want to throw money at a vague concept of “security” without having a crumb of a threat model in mind.

      • @[email protected]
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        1911 months ago

        IMO people mainly just want big tech to quit snooping on everything they do.

        On the other hand, it is a lot of hoops and a large learning curve for those to whom have no idea where to start other than having big tech stop snooping.

      • lckdscl [they/them]
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        311 months ago

        The problem with a late stage capitalist world is that the moment you realize you want to escape Big Tech, there are already numerous of services selling pseudo or marketable privacy-respecting product with comparable convenience to the competing Big Tech counterpart. This appeal to non-technical consumers means their willingness to “vote” with their wallet what they thinks is the best replacement.

        The drawback of this, for non-technical consumers, is that it’s hard to distinguish between no-nonsense actual privacy-respecting services (with caveats laid out before you pay), where you’re forced to do research, and those filled with buzzwords and marketable features, where it’s easy to completely put your trust in these companies.

        • amigan
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          010 months ago

          By definition, if you don’t feel like putting in the homework, you are ceding control to someone else. At that point, all bets are off. Even trustworthy entities can turn on a dime. Ease and full control are mutually exclusive.

    • dbx12
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      110 months ago

      Technically you still have a web of trust with S/MIME. You just don’t say “I trust you because X said you’re good and I trust X” but you say “I trust you, because you paid X money and X did probably a good background check on you”. So rather a tree than a web.

      I guess it is philosophical to argue if a tree can be considered a net as well.

        • dbx12
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          10 months ago

          Basically Let’s encrypt and geotrust certificates :D

          Oooh, something like let’s encrypt but for mails would be nice

  • @[email protected]
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    911 months ago

    No. Proton only encrypts message content to/from other Protonmail users. Message subject, sender, and recipient aren’t encryptable for email.

  • 👁️👄👁️
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    711 months ago

    It’ll be stored off of Google servers but they’ll see it anyways. Still, it’s best to do that while migrating emails. Have your old one forward to the new one.

  • @[email protected]
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    611 months ago

    Your emails are already scanned by Gmail at that point, so you’re defeating the purpose

  • GadgeteerZA
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    610 months ago

    No it’s not more secure going via Gmail. But what I did was to get the paid Proton Mail and I used my own domain name. So yes plenty pain and time now to slowly update my email address everywhere away from Gmail to my own domain name with Proton Mail.

    But hopefully it’s the last time I have to update the email address everywhere, because even if I leave Proton Mail, my mail address is not tied to them, but to my own domain name so I can point that to any other mail provider.

    So every mail address I’m changing now, is one away from Gmail. But if course 99.9% of businesses don’t Encrypt mail, so I’m only really cutting Google out of the loop (assuming the other party is not using Gmail of course).