• seathru@lemmy.sdf.org
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    7 months ago

    No company is going to legally go to bat for you for $10/mo. I love how Proton nonchalantly calls out the user’s dumb move in the article:

    Proton provides privacy by default and not anonymity by default because anonymity requires certain user actions to ensure proper OpSec, such as not adding your Apple account as an optional recovery method. Note, Proton does not require adding a recovery address as this information can in theory be turned over under Swiss court order…

    • Leraje@lemmy.blahaj.zone
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      7 months ago

      It is worth noting though, that Proton doesn’t allow you to use certain domains for recovery addresses. Admittedly this was awhile ago and maybe things have changed there but when I first joined Proton they wouldn’t allow me to set a duck.com or simplelogin.com or addy.io address as a recovery email.

      Obviously using an apple ID is stupid but Proton could make more of an effort too.

      • Canary9341
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        7 months ago

        They are actually quite aggressive about blocking disposable emails, most free services don’t work. I have used protonmail a few times for semi-disposable accounts that used disposable emails to sign up, and some of them were banned later.

        • Railcar8095@lemm.ee
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          7 months ago

          So they will ask proton again for the address where everything is being forwarded… Not a good plan.

          It would be fun to daisy chain a bazillion emails, all forwarding to each other in circles and have the cops just call yahoo 20 times.

            • Railcar8095@lemm.ee
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              7 months ago

              No, only the ones on Proton. If you send or receive an email from outside, it’s unencrypted there.

              But still, it’s little to no difference for law enforcement. They will get the real address and whichever little info Proton or the other provider has on you.

    • deweydecibel@lemmy.world
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      7 months ago

      At any point in the process, does it warn you about setting up recovery with personal email addresses?

      Feels like with as much as Proton advertises nowadays as a privacy protecting service, they need to be taking into consideration that a lot of their customers now are going to be average users who don’t know anything about proper OpSec. They should be much clearer about what things they can’t protect you from.

      It shouldn’t be in a press release like this, they should be explaining the difference between privacy and anonymity to the customer. It’s not like their marketing team isn’t aware of the fact most people don’t know any better.

      It’s in their best interests, too, because it doesn’t matter how many times you say “we provide privacy not anonymity”, the headlines are a bad look.

      • Railcar8095@lemm.ee
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        7 months ago

        Unless you’re targeted by law enforcement, having a recovery email won’t be an issue. 99.99% of the userbase world never have a problem with this.

        I get what you say, but it’s really nitpicking at this point I think.

    • azalty@jlai.lu
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      7 months ago

      Proton does require a recovery email address if you sign up to a mail forwarding service or similar, right after creating the account. In that case the account remains locked if you don’t, so that’s just a lie

      • Setarkus.LW@lemmy.world
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        7 months ago

        In the article it says that that’s a one-time verification address. Though that leaves the question if/how long it’s stored

        • azalty@jlai.lu
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          7 months ago

          Still, it wasn’t optional for me, so I’m pretty annoyed that they’re saying it.

          You can remove the mail after but indeed, I won’t trust proton with not keeping that info. The mail has to be entered in the recovery email field, and then sends mail to the recovery email when you have unread mail. So it’s not a one-time mail sent with a code.

    • The Doctor@beehaw.org
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      7 months ago

      Thing is, Protonmail has been telling people this from the very beginning. It’s like it gets rediscovered every year or so when somebody else gets busted.

    • classic@fedia.io
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      7 months ago

      What would be a more appropriate email address to use - or just no recovery email?

      • seathru@lemmy.sdf.org
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        7 months ago

        It’s best for anonymity to not use one at all. Proton provides a recovery key to allow access to your account if you manage to lock yourself out. Keep that key somewhere safe/secure.

  • VerseAndVermin@lemmy.world
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    7 months ago

    It looks more like multiple companies were needed to pin the individual. I don’t expect any company to not comply with legal requests. My understanding is this is why it’s important to know what information a company retains.

    For my own use, I have used Proton just to mitigate being a source of ad info and to get better service. I’m not interesting enough to overthrow anything.

    • Simon Müller@sopuli.xyz
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      7 months ago

      Most info came from the fact that they made the move to link their personal iCloud Mail as a recovery method.

      Infinite wisdom.

  • Zerush
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    7 months ago

    Logically, any service, whether private or not, is required by law to reveal the user data they have, if there is a court order for a criminal investigation. Proton cannot refuse, if it does not want to face a complaint that could even lead to the closure of its service. That is, in this headline the “Proton Mail” can be replaced by any other email, host, chat, social network, VPN, Lemmy, it can occur in any of them. As said, read TOS and PP of what you use

    • umbrella
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      7 months ago

      except they told users in the past that they dont have this informaion

      • Zerush
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        7 months ago

        They don’t have information about the content of the mails, but same as any other mail provider the account data and the IP, this is the data which they can provide to the police. The rest are informations from the ISP and from own investigations of the police itself. Because of this the title that “Proton discloses user data leading to arrest in Spain” is somewhat sensationalist.

      • FutileRecipe@lemmy.world
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        7 months ago

        Out of curiosity, can you link where Proton said they don’t have the user’s recovery email, that the users themselves attached to their Proton account?

  • Staraven1@lemmy.blahaj.zone
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    7 months ago

    Maybe also just consider any email insecure by default ? Like it’s fcking email, having privacy, let alone security or anonymity is just like trying to mod a skateboard into a secure highway vehicule imho

  • crispy_kilt@feddit.de
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    7 months ago

    Not really news. Proton follows the law. If they get a Swiss court order they will comply.

    If you want to do illegal (under Swiss law) things, proton won’t cover you.

  • Freuks
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    2 months ago

    deleted by creator

        • You999@sh.itjust.works
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          6 months ago

          They dont log by default, they log with a warrant, I guess. But still, hello, they are just companies, they don’t owe you nothing. You should all use anonymous services wich will close in fee weeks or months as it’s illegal to keep nothing

          If you look though my comment history you’ll see I’m a huge advocate for tor/I2P instead of VPNs

  • BananaTrifleViolin@lemmy.world
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    7 months ago

    I’m not sure how I feel about this news story.

    On the one side, it’s good to make sure people are aware of the limitations of secure email providers. However on the other the article almost reads as of this should be a surprise to people?

    I use Proton mail and pay for my account. I don’t pay for anonyminity - I pay for privacy. They are two very different things.

    The article talks about Opsec (operational security) and they’re right - if you need anonyminity then don’t use your personal apple email as a recovery address. That is a flaw in the user approach and expectations that unencrypted data held by Proton is also “secure”. Your basic details and your IP address are going to be recorded and available to law enforcement. Use a VPN or Tor to access the service and use another untraceable email for recovery, and pay via crypto if you want true anonymity. And even then there are other methods of anonymous or untraceable secure email that may be better than Proton mail (such as self hosted).

    But for most users like myself, if you’re not looking for anonyminity then Proton is fine as is. My email address is my name and I use it to keep my emails secure and not snooped on by Google etc.

    Proton advertises itself as private, secure and encrypted. It does not claim to offer anonymity.

    • Cataphract
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      7 months ago

      All valid points made in an academic setting. I think the general consensus, and the points other users are trying to make, involve more transparency and proper presenting of the facts in their statements. I have parroted the “oh you should try proton, they’re more private and secure” to other people. This is a factual but misleading statement without the nuance of higher OPSEC fundamentals.

      Just look at their main landing page for proton mail.

      • Proton Mail’s end-to-end encryption and zero-access encryption ensure only you can see your emails. Not even Proton can view the content of your emails and attachments.

      • Proton Mail protects you from these digital spies and prevents companies from monitoring you.

      • your data is protected by some of the world’s strictest privacy laws.

      • From newsrooms, activists, and international organizations to academics, Nobel Prize winners, and movie characters, Proton Mail is the trusted choice for secure and private communication. Join over 100 million people worldwide who believe their online privacy is worth protecting.

      A common user will look at this and believe that by just having this account, they will be protected. There is no asterisk* beside e-mail recovery explaining the dangers of linking to another e-mail. In fact, a lot of their services promote linking e-mail because you can’t use third party verification if you haven’t setup your recovery e-mail and/or cell phone verification. I ran into this trying to help an older relative who’s paranoid about online accounts, ended up being more hoops and they were dissuaded because it always come down to “enter more information to continue…privately ;)”

      The front landing page should have a section explaining everything that’s being said here with vpn’s, alternative e-mails, and how to really protect yourself with anonymity. To a lot of people, Private+Secure=Anonymous. It’s not accurate, but unless you already know the things you have to do to protect your identity, it’s not very clear on what the average person should do.

    • Coasting0942@reddthat.com
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      7 months ago

      Proton is the only one I know of who takes mailed cash.

      This was all an opsec problem. And not even an “exposed my ip address because a software bug leaked it” it was an “here’s my usual email address in case I get locked out”.

      The cops didn’t need to break into proton email. They just asked the backup email address for that stuff.

      • lemmyreader
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        7 months ago

        Proton is the only one I know of who takes mailed cash.

        Proton accepts payments via postal mail you mean ? Posteo and mailbox.org do that.

  • lemmyreader
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    7 months ago

    All the commenters suggesting that Proton is just a company and would always give in to legal requests and all other companies and any email provider would do the same, here’s some more to add. Yesterday I saw a now invalid toot comment from ProtonPrivacy on Mastodon Social where they wrote that it was Apple who was to blame and that Proton gave the recovery email address only because this was a case of a terrorism suspect suggesting that if that (terrorism) was not the case they would not have given in to the request. Today their comment sadly gives a 404 error. Searching a bit further this article comes up mentioning Proton and Wire :

    In the new resolution, the National Audience judge recalls that in January, in a judicial report he issued on the case, he highlighted a conversation from July 12th and 13th, 2020, about the king’s visits, which was included in the Tsunami investigative evidence, and of which he admits that until that point he had not made reference in his investigation which extends over the period from 2016 to 2022. Specifically, one of the people under investigation, the Girona businessperson Josep Campmajó, spoke to the figure named Xuxu Rondinaire, with profile @marietadelulllviu, about mobilizations in 2019, using the Wire messenger app. The judge has asked for the identification of this person, information now obtained by the Civil Guard, which details that they used Europol to ask the Swiss authorities for the Wire firm to identify the person behind this pseudonym, with a profile that is also used in Proton Mail, an encrypted email system. In the police cooperation form requesting the information, the Spanish officers indicate to the Swiss authorities that the investigation is for the crime of terrorism.

    • Proton@mastodon.social
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      7 months ago

      @lemmyreader Yes, the name/address of the terrorism suspect was actually given to police by Apple, not Proton. The terror suspect added their real-life Apple email as an optional recovery address in Proton Mail. Proton can’t decrypt data, but in terror cases Swiss courts can obtain recovery email.

    • starman2112@sh.itjust.works
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      7 months ago

      So proton will only give users’ information to governments if the government calls the user a terrorist. Good thing governments don’t just throw that word around willy-nilly!

    • pacology@lemmy.world
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      7 months ago

      Proton is just a company and would always give in to legal requests and all other companies and any email provider would do the same

      It’s amazing how people easily forget about lavabit and what a company that is committed to real privacy is about.

    • azalty@jlai.lu
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      7 months ago

      Not sure how they’re better than proton is terms of compliance and anonymity

        • azalty@jlai.lu
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          7 months ago

          Source: trust me bro

          It’s just that more people use proton so more of them have their identity leaked. I don’t see how the terms of these 2 companies are better

            • azalty@jlai.lu
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              7 months ago

              I’ve never heard of those 2 providers and they don’t seem to be any better. I’m just looking for facts to back that and so far I haven’t seen any

              Being skeptical doesn’t mean being a troll or a fed, wtf. I don’t know what you’re on but it seems cool

              As for the « are you trying to discredit … without evidence » I want to answer « what can be asserted without evidence can also be dismissed without evidence »

              • lemmyreader
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                7 months ago

                I’ve never heard of those 2 providers and they don’t seem to be any better.

                You never heard of the other two providers but yet you already draw the conclusion that they don’t seem to be better. What does “better” mean to you in this context ?

                • azalty@jlai.lu
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                  7 months ago

                  Their privacy policy. They log IP addresses and are not immune to legal actions, and as such, are not really better than Proton in terms of legal actions

        • Possibly linux@lemmy.zip
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          7 months ago

          PGP doesn’t protect anything but message contents. Additionally, if you key it compromised all of your messages are compromised.

          • lemmyreader
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            7 months ago

            PGP doesn’t protect anything but message contents.

            Indeed, be careful with choosing your email subject line when using GnuPG to encrypt.

            Additionally, if you key it compromised all of your messages are compromised.

            Yes, maybe for some people it is. I once knew a person who created a new GnuPG key every few months. It is also recommended in some howtos that making your key never expire is a bad idea.

            By the way, for all readers interested in using GnuPG, FSF updated their Email Self-Defense guide this week. https://hostux.social/@fsf/112405348416810419

  • bufalo1973
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    7 months ago

    Proton should look who was asking the disclosure. He’s a known far-right judge that opens cases like beer cans. And the “terrorist” group is marked as such because someone had a heart attack the same day there were protests in Catalonia.

    • AeonFelis@lemmy.world
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      7 months ago

      Does it matter? He’s still a judge with a judge’s authority. If their policy is to obey the law then the political views of the judge don’t change the fact that his order was lawful.

      • bufalo1973
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        7 months ago

        So if a Russian judge had asked the same the outcome would be the same too? Or a Chinese one?

        • AeonFelis@lemmy.world
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          6 months ago

          Depends on what you mean by that:

          1. A Russian/Chinese judge ordering the disclosure of data about a Spanish citizen? Then no, because judges from one country should hold no jurisdiction over citizens of other countries (unless it’s about things these citizens did in the judge’s country - which is not the hypothetical case here)
          2. A Russian/Chinese born person who became a judge in Spain? Then yes, because the judge’s ethnicity should not be a factor on whether or not their authority is respected.
          3. A Russian/Chinese judge ordering the disclosure of data about a Russian/Chinese (respectively) citizen? Then this depends on whether or not Proton Mail is willing to stop doing business in Russia/China (again - respectively). Though I’m not sure if that will save them, since it may still be possible, even after the cut ties with that country, for the government to go after them using international treaties.

          At any rate, my point is that the decision of whether you obey the law or protect your users should be about the country as a whole, not about any specific judge employed by it. Choosing to obey some judges of the country while ignoring the warrants signed by other judges of the same country is just stupid. The country will not trust you to respect their authority and will not permit you to do business there, while the users will not trust you to keep your promise to protect them and won’t use your service.

    • telep
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      7 months ago

      only as private as you make it. they are required by law when mandated by a warrant to release IP & other (unencrypted) data they have on you. use a proxy to connect & take other opsec measures to conceal your online identity just like other sensitive web browsing activities if you want to use email “privately”.

      this is really only helping anonymity though, as the email protocol has no built in encryption. unless you are using PGP it really isn’t apt for secure communication at all.

    • OsrsNeedsF2P
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      7 months ago

      I used to use Protonmail and VPN, but one day my password just randomly stopped working and I lost access to everything. Switched over to Tutanota and Mullvad and have had zero issues since.

      • TurboHarbinger@feddit.cl
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        7 months ago

        Bro this reads like an ad. You using VPN has nothing to do with YOU losing your password.

        Edit: might add this is the classic bad user you see in tech support.

        CAPS ON

        types password

        Login failed

        tries the same password several times

        gets locked out

        blames the service

        • OsrsNeedsF2P
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          7 months ago

          Lmao you’re right. Removed the first part. It came to look like an ad because I posted my first thought, then came back with my second one and appended it.

          As far as the password goes, to this day I have no idea how it happened. I don’t want to admit I use the same password for everything, but ye know… it just stopped working for Proton one day.