they scrubed there no ip logs policy years ago

  • @[email protected]
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    212 years ago

    The article is actually pretty balanced. Yes Proton is secure and private, but if you’re hiding from law enforcement, don’t expect a third party to take the fall for you.

      • Norgur
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        22 years ago

        I mean… It’s not like mailcow is too hard to set up if you want to write down your crimes in the same way Janice from accounting sent you that obnoxious blinking new Year’s .gif Mail

  • @[email protected]
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    2 years ago

    My understanding is that the email is encrypted still so… they hand over the encrypted data which might be useless.

    (CEO did a podcast this week for a Linux podcast)

  • Pasta Dental
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    282 years ago

    Idk for most people, but the reason I use proton mail is to avoid google parsing everything I receive to send me ads. I “have nothing to hide” on a legal pov, I’m not a criminal, the worst offence I do is like Jay walking or crossing at a red light on foot when there is no one at midnight. I don’t use proton services to protect myself from the law (or in other words to avoid the consequences of my acts), I just want to be a customer instead of a product.

    • Onii-Chan
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      92 years ago

      This is exactly why I use Proton as well. I’m not worried about law enforcement, I just want Google and other big tech’s tentacles out of my fucking business. I don’t want to be advertised to.

    • @[email protected]
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      72 years ago

      YOU JAY WALK!?

      You are a disgrace!!! How do you sleep with yourself?

      DISGUSTING!

      /s

      But that’s a really great point. It’s easy to thinking of your threat model as all or nothing. And you are right. I’m not hiding from the law. I’m hiding from advertisers. If the government acquires my information then it was a mistake on their part as there is nothing there to find other than emails from my bank.

    • @[email protected]
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      72 years ago

      This exactly. This is the audience for proton mail, and their success while sticking to this model is hope for us all

  • DARbarian
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    522 years ago

    What are they supposed to do as an internationally known and used company? Reject legal proceedings and ignore official national laws?

    • admiralteal
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      422 years ago

      I mean, the answer to that is clearly they should structure their service to store the absolute least possible personal information needed to allow the service to function so that when a legitimate law enforcement agency comes knocking they can honestly say they don’t have much.

      Which… appears to be pretty much what they do.

      I agree with you. Losing the protection of a right – even one as fundamental as privacy – is by definition not a violation so long as that happens through due process. Now we can certainly talk a lot about what level of process is due, and I’m sure it will be basically unanimous that current standards around the world are FAR too accommodating to law enforcement, but at least in principle a warrant justifies the invasion of privacy. That’s what the warrant is for.

      This story kind of makes me want to switch all my stuff to ProtonMail.

      • DARbarian
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        62 years ago

        Yeah I would agree with you that given the service they provide (email is brutal), they couldn’t really collect any less info or improve security/privacy much more.

      • DARbarian
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        2 years ago

        How though? They advertsize themselves as the privacy-conscious Google alternative which they very much are. Idk if I’ve just not been exposed to (their) ads, but do they make all kinds of unreasonable claims like being outside of all legal jurisdiction?

      • nelson
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        2 years ago

        And what advertising is that precisely? No data ( emails, passwords, drive files ) were shared with the authorities. So the data is still secure and private.

        As far as I can tell they haven’t falsely advertised.

        I’d give them bonus points for transparency ( publishing how many court ordered subpoenas they receive on a yearly basis ) compared to other companies that don’t.

        Other companies which are prominent in the privacy/secure email scene face similar issues.

        E.g.: https://www.internetsociety.org/blog/2021/03/enough-is-enough-what-happens-when-law-enforcement-bends-laws-to-access-data/

        I think you’re mixing up anonymity with privacy. It can definitely be more anonymous, but you would need to take steps for that yourself ( Tor, VPN, … ).

      • @[email protected]
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        42 years ago

        LMAO, the downvotes. Stop the bootlicking, please, asking for not lying in the promotions is not that big of a deal

  • Elise
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    142 years ago

    Well I’m a customer and I think it’s fine if the requests are legitimate. The question then of course is what is legitimate.

    • @[email protected]
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      52 years ago

      Its always about petty shit like piracy. You’d wish it was all them catching CSAM creators but thats a sliver of it. They’d be catching more rich dudes if it was.

  • @[email protected]
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    21 year ago

    ProtonMail was not even against cooperation with the RuSSian terrorist government, and this post was still downvoted, funny.

    Have you already decided whether privacy is important to you or not?

    • @[email protected]
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      2 years ago

      Swiss law doesnt allow complying with VPN services afaik.

      ProtonVPN and ProtonMail are completely seperate too.

  • @[email protected]
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    242 years ago

    My threat model is not LE, its google, facebook, etc. If me using privacy services happens to make LE’s job harder well thats just the cherry on top.

    • @[email protected]
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      42 years ago

      At the same time it’s also important that the provider only complies with requests where it legally has to. I trust Proton to act this way.