this post was submitted on 07 May 2024
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This comment is completely off the mark. The information that they disclosed is the recovery email -the same exact thing which happened previously- not any content of any email.
Also, proton does encryption with PGP, but you can't encrypt if the other side doesn't use PGP (which is the case for 99.98% of humans on the planet). If they do, proton supports this including with arbitrary clients using their bridge.
Sir, if your recipients don't have a public key, you cannot even encrypt the message... That is how asymmetric-key crypto works.
Umm, you absolutely can. Use gpg, encrypt the txt, copy the encrypted text into the email. EZPZ.
Just encrypt with pgp and send encrypted text
That's how a good portion of the Dark web works, and I find it amazing
FYI email contents were not decrypted or turned over to police, as far as I know Proton's E2EE is still as good as whatever system you're using. Proton doesn't have the keys to decrypt your emails, it never did. What they have access to is metadata that is necessary to function when your private key is unavailable - e.g. your public encryption key used to encrypt incoming emails from non-Proton sources, or in this case, a recovery email address (I don't know what the recovery process entails and whether it can restore encrypted emails).