Comment by SilverElfin
4 hours ago
I thought Proton was a confidentiality / privacy oriented thing. How do they even know who owns the accounts?
4 hours ago
I thought Proton was a confidentiality / privacy oriented thing. How do they even know who owns the accounts?
You can disable an account without knowing who owns it, although they do have credit card/payment information now, and I don't think new accounts get encryption services unless they pay.
That said, if your inbox is encrypted, protonmail does so on the client side with a second password. They can maybe delete the account, but proton mail doesn't know what the encrypted data is. What happens to new emails sent to a disabled address is anyone's guess though. Honestly I think they're doing the best they can given the circumstances
>and I don't think new accounts get encryption services unless they pay.
source? Their compare plans page specifically lists "End-to-end encryption" as a feature for their free plan.
https://proton.me/mail/pricing#compare-plans
You are trusting them. They control the client, how the keys are created/stored, etc. Javascript, etc. If they were to suddenly turn one day, they could.
This is the weakness of cloud services.
It is very possible for them to inject custom JS to a specific user.
You are the bosses at Protonmail, do you want police at 6 am shaking your kids, seize all your devices, loose all agreements with PayPal and Visa/MasterCard, because you want to protect a guy who distributes child pornography or plans a terrorist attack ?
No way, so you tap on the shoulder of the CTO and ask him to push a temporary update or turn on a feature flags, in order to collect the missing information.
This is true for all companies who control the client.
Trusting them is almost guaranteed, but it doesn't have to be, sort of. The clients are opensource so you literally clone, audit, and run the clients locally.
Full disclosure, I use Proton and overall trust them so unless I see strong evidence of abuse or lies on their part I'm inclined to post contextualizing comments on stuff like this, b/c well I don't wanna host my own mail server, at least not in prod.
Or just use an open source email client.
I would expect their own apps to be open source, are they not?
2 replies →
Second paragraph of the article:
>But last month, Proton disabled email accounts belonging to journalists reporting on security breaches of various South Korean government computer systems following a complaint by an unspecified cybersecurity agency
They all are until they get threatened.
Soon or later we will default to analog means. It’s not looking good.