• @[email protected]
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    1391 year ago

    Yeah no shit, and you do think I have a single goddamn bit of influence over my corporation’s choice of email client??

    • @[email protected]
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      1 year ago

      They can leech all the data they want from my employer. I don’t give a fuck. Never use company assets for personal business as an addendum.

      Just be a little more careful with your own stuff, s’all.

        • Otter
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          1 year ago

          A lot of healthcare and education institutions use Outlook as well, so I wouldn’t be surprised if mental health or legal uses it too. There may be rules about what kind of client/student/patient information can be sent over email, and often there are healthcare/institution specific variants of the office suites which (are supposed to) meet regulatory requirements

          I think the other comment applies regardless. Do work things on the work device/account and let the workplace handle any other concerns. When it comes time to discuss alternatives, you can make a case for something else

        • @[email protected]
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          131 year ago

          There are different versions of Outlook depending on your subscription. Companies that do things properly, never see the problematic, “free version” of Outlook. They have very fine control over the features and data collections they enable.

    • macniel
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      61 year ago

      pretty sure when you bring that up to your company, that another company will have access to internal communication, that they will do something against it. It’s a willing data breach.

      • 𝐘Ⓞz҉
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        101 year ago

        There’s no other company with all the required certification that can replace Microsoft office suite so all corporations are stuck with it and tbh nobody cares.

        • macniel
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          31 year ago

          Perhaps nobody in the US or in jobs with non-sensitive data cares about that. In the EU this could backfire hard against Microsoft.

        • @[email protected]
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          21 year ago

          There are plenty of other services that have the compliance check boxes. Most of them are garbage, expensive, and don’t come with 5% of the other tools that MS does.

          There is a choice, and companies choose ms because it is best.

    • Elven_Mithril
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      11 year ago

      well, as far as you use it just for your work, who cares, right? It’s the same as I’d never use Lastpass, my corp use it and even offered it for our personal use :D thanks, but no thanks! For personal use I would never use any microsoft solution.

  • @[email protected]
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    541 year ago

    No shit. There’s a reason they are killing the nice and simple Windows Mail app; it allows you to sync with your email without Microsoft servers between.

    Also, the biggest issue for me is the UX. I use outlook for my work email and like to separate my work and personal life, so soon I just won’t have an app for my personal email on my PC.

    If anyone knows of a similar windows mail app with good touch support and without such a traditional mouse designed UI, please share it.

      • @[email protected]
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        151 year ago

        They’re still working out some kinks, but yes, the new UI of Thunderbird 115+ is pretty good.

        • @[email protected]
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          41 year ago

          Thunderbird has a new UI?

          I’m on 115 and i dont notice anything different from how its always been… (This isnt some joke, or insult, or anything. I genuinely don’t notice anything different?)

          • @[email protected]
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            71 year ago

            If you update from a previous version then it configures itself to be similar to the old UI. If you do a clean install it looks very different.

    • GigglyBobble
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      241 year ago

      I’ve been using Thunderbird since forever. It’s not perfect but I like it better than bloated and laggy Outlook.

      • Dave.
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        1 year ago

        I thought Thunderbird was getting increasingly shitty and slower/clunky, until I realised it was actually my ISP’s mail server getting increasingly shit. This became immediately obvious the day that emails started taking 12-18 hours to land in my inbox. Reallllll handy for those time limited account reset emails. Funnily enough, they were planning real soon to outsource their email to another company for the low, low cost of just a few extra dollars a month, opt in now!

        Transferred my IMAP inbox to my own domain, everything is now awesome again.

    • Derin
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      1 year ago

      I’ve been paying for mailspring for a few years now, and I love it. It has touch and gesture support, is open source, and is available on Windows, MacOS, and Linux.

      Its paid plan includes some nice features like email tracking - which you can’t really get from just a simple client and (needs a server to track who has opened an email and when) - and id lookup, for things like quickly seeing the LinkedIn profile of a sender not in your contacts list.

      Definitely my favorite desktop client by a wide margin, and one I would recommend wholeheartedly.

      Edit: Just to be clear, it’s available for free as well.

        • Derin
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          1 year ago

          Local only.

          Even if you pay for their subscription, when you get to a new computer you need to manually authenticate with each service. But, it remembers which accounts you have, so it’s faster than manually setting up each account from scratch. Basically “we know you have Gmail, xmail, ymail - tap each account to reauthenticate”

          It’s a good way to have (part of) the convenience of a cloud service, while combining it with the security of local only clients.

          Edit: all of this is optional, you can choose not to let their cloud service know of any of your accounts.

    • dalë
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      81 year ago

      What especially galled me was as I was updating my laptop before flashing to Linux the new outlook will not work unless edge installed, I had just uninstalled that pile of garbage.

      Ah well, at least pop_os works great 😃

      • @[email protected]
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        21 year ago

        As a guy who runs Windows 10 LTSC on one of the machine, yeah I agree it do suck ass

        Not only it’s UI design doesn’t fit at all with overall Windows 10 UI design, it also runs significantly slower than the old Windows Mail app

        And in the typical Microsoft fashion, they’ll shoved that garbage into everyone’s throat despite nobody ever asked for it

        Fuck that

    • @[email protected]
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      41 year ago

      If you’re still using Windows 11, they’re still collecting your data. Sure, no need to give them more, but maybe that’s the push you need to move elsewhere. There are really good options.

    • @[email protected]
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      1 year ago

      I don’t know any of the alternatives that have similar UI to the Windows Mail app

      But it is possible to get back the old Windows Mail app by obtaining the dumped package file for the app (either by looking for it online or leeching it from the official Microsoft Store website using store.adguard.ru) and then install it using Powershell

      At least that’s what I do with one of my systems running Windows 10 LTSC, since that version of Windows doesn’t came with Windows Mail and MS Store pre-installed

  • @[email protected]
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    521 year ago

    What part of Windows (or Microsoft software in general) is not a data collection service?

  • PlantObserver
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    451 year ago

    Hey Proton how about you quit privacy-washing and actually prioritize and release feature parity products for Linux so your customers aren’t being herded onto windows’ data harvesting platform just so they can use your supposedly privacy forward products

    • @[email protected]
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      361 year ago

      The Linux Experiment recently interviewed the CEO who answered this question.

      Basically it’s the same as anything else. Linux requires more effort to code for due to its variety of distributions, and has a significantly smaller userbase.

      In short, don’t blame Proton, blame the (lack of) users.

      • @[email protected]
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        171 year ago

        I mean, can’t you just package your app in flatpack or even snap? Bam, your app works on 99% of distributions for little effort. That’s what Spotify does, and I’d argue they have even less incentive to support Linux than proton does

        • Yer Ma
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          121 year ago

          Spoken like someone who has never developed a app package

        • @[email protected]
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          71 year ago

          I don’t know, I’m not a developer. Lots of companies don’t make their products available on Linux, most cite similar reasoning, so it’s unsurprising. But I agree it’s disappointing. I really wish Linux was more user-friendly.

        • slst
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          11 year ago

          He also answered this claim, it is right for apps that aren’t stuff like Proton VPN that can’t work in a sandboxed environment. They are working on it iirc

        • @[email protected]
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          11 year ago

          Sure, as long as you don’t need any integration with other software, don’t need arbitrary IPC, and actually keep some dependencies in line with some common denominator because there’s only so much you can do with static linking (oh excuse me, distributing the shared libraries in the same package as your binaries as if it’s a new thing) once it reach the “program must actually run” part.

          Flatpack and every other similar solution that are described as “works everywhere” always come with a heck of limitations.

      • Illecors
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        11 year ago

        That’s a bullshit excuse. Looks at Arch’s AUR. Look at Gentoo’s guru. What happens for proprietary stuff is a deb or rpm package is downloaded, extracted and files copies where they should be. That’s it. And it works, because the cornerstone of the system is libc and the kernel. And these, for the overwhelming majority of applications, behave exactly the same on all distros.

        • @[email protected]
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          91 year ago

          I don’t want google to read emails from my doctor, or between me and my friend in a country that has an authoritarian government, or really anything. If you think you have nothing you need to keep out of the massive surveillance network most companies have become, you’re mistaken.

        • @[email protected]
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          81 year ago

          Do you realize that right now there are US states trying to make publicly existing as a transgender person prosecutable as an obscene act? Or that there are states where abortion is illegal? I’m assuming you are american but that also applies to other countries. In Russia any public indication that one is LGBT is liable to get one persecuted by law and by bands of raging homophobes.

          At the best of times this attitude “if you have done nothing wrong, you got nothing to hide” is naive. But these days, as the many flaws of the justice system and the raging bigotry of many people are transparent to see and widely commented on, it’s downright clueless to say something like this.

      • @[email protected]
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        11 year ago

        I think the bigger issue is the variety of distros that end up not being compatible. Even if you overall have a lot of Linux users if they, for the sake of argument, distribute evenly between all distros then it’s still a lot of effort to code. The only difference is that the argument will change from “Linux has a small userbase” to “Distribution X has a small userbase”.

        Linux doesn’t just need more users to be worthwhile to develop for, it also needs a distro agnostic solution to run software. That or significantly reducing (or streamlining) the amount of distros so the developers would have far less configurations to account for.

    • Saik0
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      211 year ago

      I don’t use proton so forgive me if this is a stupid question…

      But do you need an app? Can’t you just use whatever browser you want for their services?

      • mr_robot
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        1 year ago

        Of course you can access everything through the web on Linux. I really like Proton’s web mail interface. Unfortunately, Proton does not have a Linux analog to their windows client that provides automatic file syncing. I think that what the commenter is complaining about.

        There is a dedicated Linux client for Proton VPN and in my experience it integrates quite well on Debian-based distributions.

      • @[email protected]
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        121 year ago

        Also, there’s Thunderbird if you NEED a fat client for your email. Except Proton’s strength is where the service is located and the security of access. Having a full copy locally on your system kind of defeats that.

    • @[email protected]
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      01 year ago

      I finally said screw it and am leaving Proton for a proper paid service. I never upgraded Proton to a paid tier because it never matured enough for me to use for real. I never once migrated contacts over to it (just a couple people who understood I was testing it).

      Yea, so there’s a connection to my credit card. At least it’s with a professional org that has proper modern mail management (something post-2000), and gives you tools to manage your email.

      I really wanted Proton to work out so I could recommend it to friends and family. But it’s a terrible user experience. I missed 50 emails because it keeps moving them to spam even after I set the sender as not spam. Oh, and spam management requires (according to support) logging into the web, not thru the mobile client. 🤦‍♂️

      Can you imagine telling a customer this with a straight face and not seeing a problem with it? I’m using your app and can’t manage spam?

  • @[email protected]
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    401 year ago

    Outlook honestly was not that bad for a while, but of course Microsoft does what Microsoft does. I’ve been using Thunderbird for about a year now and it is very full featured coming directly from outlook.

    • @[email protected]
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      191 year ago

      I use Outlook on my work Mac, and am forever amazed at how hard they pushed on getting me to switch to “New” Outlook, but how many features they never bothered to port over. Like, I can’t export my mailbox without having to switch it back to ‘old’ Outlook. Calendars straight up don’t work half the time and there’s no obvious button to switch from a list of events for the month, back to a monthly calendar view.

      Outlook for Mac is a fucking mess. I really do need to switch over to Thunderbird.

      • @[email protected]
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        11 year ago

        For me, Mail was a little anemic. It’s nice to have a more full-featured option, but I agree that it’s a mistake for MS to can the Mail App that met 90% of people’s needs.

    • Kairos
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      31 year ago

      What was the hardest thing about the transition?

      • @[email protected]
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        61 year ago

        Personally, i got pretty used to the focused view from Outlook. Other than missing that, it’s been pretty great.

      • @[email protected]
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        11 year ago

        I use if for exchange and gmail - it’s pretty robust. Plus, they are approaching completion of their mobile app which has similar capabilities

        • lazynooblet
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          21 year ago

          Looks like it uses IMAP. Nothing wrong with that. It is just common practive when locking down Exchange Online to tick the box in Conditional Access that disables “legacy protocols”, which includes IMAP. I’ve been using eM Client which uses EWS but doesn’t support push-mail so still on the look-out for something else.

    • @[email protected]
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      221 year ago

      Thats what i thought but holy shit its so much worse.

      Its not even data that is needed for outlook but like pretty much everything on your pc.

      including your username and password, send in clear text

      I agree with the article’s statement. How the fuck is this legal.

      • @[email protected]
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        1 year ago

        Wait what I just thought this was another round of whining and clutching pearls over microsoft stuff being spyware but thats actually fucked.

          • @[email protected]
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            People whine about the same thing over and over and over, somehow acting shocked and outraged when microsoft does each month what its been doing for decades. Make their product somehow even more shitty and erode their customers experience so they can sell you the same product with a new paintjob. Big tech sucks, they want to squeeze you dry for every nickel you ever owned, and your private information too. Its sold to anyone who wants including your government and they don’t even bother storing it securely. You know this. I know this. Even the average non tech person knows this. We’ve all known it for a very long time now.

            Don’t like it? Too bad, not changing any time soon. Kind of just have to accept microsoft cuckery if its for your work. For personal use though theres always the option to switch to linux, start using open source software, and get a new email through a public acess unix server like tilde.team

            But no, theres always some excuse lazy and stubborn people unwilling to compromise have, to not do any of that either. Cause that one videogame you really like doesn’t work on linux cause shitty anticheat, or you think you need that one adobe product that does have open source alternatives but aren’t as good as a corporate product, or your online accounts are already tied to gmail/outlook and it would be too much work to switch it all over to a new email. And dual-booting just isn’t going to work for them either, for reasons. Good options exist, but most just don’t want to take them up because they can’t stand being inconvinenced or relearning their computer software.

            So I have no more sympathy for people who willingly use windows or outlook or youtube or any corporate product and then wonder why that product continues to get worse while they charge you more money for it + a subscription now.

            Sorry for the 5 paragraph essay, I guess im just tired of seeing the /technology outrage circlejerk about this weeks episode of ‘corporate products are shit and getting shittier by the day’

  • @[email protected]
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    191 year ago

    I am aware this comes from a competitor and they want to go all out. However, what is unclear to me, does this also happen to paying users?

    For my small business I use Office 365 Business Essentials, whatever it’s called now, the cheapest one. Been using it for many years and for the price/features, it’s pretty unbeatable. I use the new Outlook on my workstation since a few months, it’s pretty slow and not feature complete but was ok. I’m in the EU and haven’t been prompted with that window where it talks about advertisers. Will check Monday if I see a list of advertisers but I think for paid users it’s not the same.

    For personal mail, I use Thunderbird, I even donated to them. I like it but would have been great if it had a view like Outlook. At the moment it has table view and cards view. Wish the cards view would more customizable.

      • @[email protected]
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        41 year ago

        I know but I don’t see any benefits to switching. It’s a little more money for fewer features and it’s still a somewhat new product.

        I’ve read some reviews and a lot of people complained about their mails not being sent/received. Might be a limited thing but my email is working so I don’t feel brave enough to start messing around with it and clients not getting my emails.

  • @[email protected]
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    171 year ago

    It’s basically gmail. It’s a web/email server that you give your creds over to . It has an offline mode that I guess makes it an app.

    Yeah they read your shit.

    • @[email protected]
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      81 year ago

      For consumers, yeah they scan your shit to sell advertisements to you. For Business customers —that could get real illegal real quick.

      • @[email protected]
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        21 year ago

        MS has much better privacy for licensed customers. It’s well documented and in their MSA.

  • @[email protected]
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    151 year ago

    Yeah, that update was the final push that moved me to Linux on my primary computer. I’ve used Linux for about 20 years on everything that wasn’t my gaming PC and between the advancements made by Valve and the increasing invasive nature of Windows put an end to my relationship with Microsoft.

  • @[email protected]
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    91 year ago

    On that topic, is there an alternative for a mail client + calendar for Win 11 that doesn’t look and feel like a Windows 95 exe named Thunderbird?

    • KᑌᔕᕼIᗩ
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      1 year ago

      Thunderbird did get a UI overhaul semi-recently so it might offer what you’re after now.

      I also liked eM Client which has a free version.

      • @[email protected]
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        1 year ago

        To be fair, that is the concept art, the real thing looks more like this:

        thunderbird interface showcase from official blog

        Certainly not Windows 95, but not as good as the concept art. Yet people still complain A LOT, because it breaks theor two decade old CSS and “looks like a electron app” (whatever that means…).

        • @[email protected]
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          11 year ago

          If someone tells me “it looks like an electron app” I assume they mean “doesn’t have a native window bar”

          • @[email protected]
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            11 year ago

            Actually this the first time I noticed Thunderbird don’t have a native window bar LOL.

            Like who looks at window bar all day?!

    • @[email protected]
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      21 year ago

      There’s surprisingly few standalone email clients for normal people on desktop platforms as far as I know.

  • FaceDeer
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    81 year ago

    I’m surprised that the developer of a privacy-focused product would accuse its competitor of not being good for privacy.

    • TheMurphy
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      221 year ago

      Fair point, but invalid point when they are right.

  • @[email protected]
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    71 year ago

    Unlike proton mail , microsoft offers basic IMAP POP functionality of its desktop app for free, Maybe proton should offer the same “essential” email functionality for free before criticizing Microsoft. there are many ways to monetize a service without rendering the free version legless.

    • @[email protected]
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      91 year ago

      there are many ways to monetize a service without rendering the free version legless

      Like Microsofts data collection for targeted advertising?

    • @[email protected]
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      Proton encrypts and decrypts your data on your machine. The secure key for this lives on your machine and never leaves. Proton do not have a copy of your key because if that key is shared with anyone, human or program, then it is no longer secure. In order to build the feature you’re talking about, that security would have to be broken. Not changed: broken. Made ineffective. Thus defying the entire point of the product.

      I recommend further study. This will get you started: https://www.eccouncil.org/cybersecurity-exchange/cyber-novice/free-cybersecurity-courses-beginners/

      • @[email protected]
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        11 year ago

        just let me encrypt my data locally. I don’t trust their obfuscated JavaScript to handle my encryption keys. Give me IMAP and I’ll use my good old client with my OpenPGP plugin.

        • @[email protected]
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          Your data is encrypted locally with Proton. Your second sentence is what you really mean, and I’m not saying you have to use or trust Proton, just that because of that local encryption of the data, third party apps can’t access the data without compromising the security of the service.

          Your described setup takes knowledge (and patience!) which customers of Proton do not possess. If you do, Proton is not the product for you, but it doesn’t matter because you can build and maintain what you need.

    • /home/pineapplelover
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      1 year ago

      You understand how the internet protocol works right. This argument has been going for a long time now. Yes, they gave up IP address because they couldn’t win in court. They’re like the only company who will fight tooth and nail for you in court but the feds ordered them to do so, so they had to comply. The messages were all end to end encrypted and other than what metadata was requested, they didn’t get much.

      Edit: Additionally, if you use protonvpn, mullvad, or any no-log vpn, you would probably be immune to this.

    • GigglyBobble
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      121 year ago

      Yeah, based on a legal request - that’s how it should be. Our problems are not police listening in on criminals but unwarranted mass-surveillance.

    • @[email protected]
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      31 year ago

      Email by its nature is not private or secure. You can do all sorts of things to try and make it private or secure but at the end of the day it’s still email. It’s going to sit somewhere plain text.

      If you want a secure communication channel use something like signal.

      People spend a lot of time and money trying to fight with the nature of email.

      • @[email protected]
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        21 year ago

        That’s my problem with proton as their marketing would lead you to believe their email is completely encrypted. Their marketing really needs a asterisk that tells you exactly what is encrypted and when.

        • @[email protected]
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          11 year ago

          Exactly.

          It’s true, your emails are end to end encrypted…if they are sent to another proton mail address. But your emails from friends, family, your doctor, etc…are all very much not encrypted.

      • @[email protected]
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        21 year ago

        They did not disclosing any content of any email. They disclosed the very little they have. Once they have been forced to log IP addresses and that was turned to law enforcement, another time they were forced to disclose a recovery email address. These facts if anything should help build trust in proton, as they show how little they collect and therefore can disclose. With signal is the same, they collect super minimal info (the time you last logged in and a couple more data points, I think), and that’s what they disclosed in the past.

        It’s a non-news.