• Saik0A
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    7 months ago

    Proton would have the key. A government that is already compelling them to hand over your account can simply be compelled to provide the TLS keys. The point is that government doesn’t have to compel proton for at rest storage, but can compel for in transit interception.

    • Joe@discuss.tchncs.de
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      7 months ago

      Read up on perfect forward secrecy and TLS.

      And yes, a jurisdiction could compel them to break their security, depending on laws and ability to threaten.

      • Saik0A
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        7 months ago

        “read up on pfs”
        “Pfs doesn’t matter”

        Literally this post.

          • Saik0A
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            7 months ago

            This whole discussion is about a government forcing Proton mail to take actions. Telling me to “read up on pfs” is irrelevant by your own admission. ProtonMail can be compelled to give up their keys, or to hand them over for all current/future transactions.

            So once again…

            “read up on pfs”
            “Pfs doesn’t matter”
            Literally this post.

            You cannot rely on MTAs to transmit ANYTHING securely in the context of this discussion. Period. There is no E2E when there’s an MTA involved unless you’re doing GPG/PGP or S/MIME. Nobody does this though… Like literally nobody. I’ve got both setup and have NEVER had an encrypted email go through because nobody else does it. It doesn’t matter what Proton claims to support.

            That’s it. Telling anyone to read up on anything when they’re 100% correct is asinine.

            Email in transit is not encrypted. At least not encrypted by anything that the government can’t compel the company to hand over.

            Edit:

            Email in transit is not encrypted. At least not encrypted by anything that the government can’t compel the company to hand over.

            This is what I originally said. It was clear. I don’t know why you’re arguing otherwise.