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ProtonMail Complied with 5,957 Data Requests in 2022 - Still Secure and Private?
(restoreprivacy.com)
Privacy has become a very important issue in modern society, with companies and governments constantly abusing their power, more and more people are waking up to the importance of digital privacy.
In this community everyone is welcome to post links and discuss topics related to privacy.
[Matrix/Element]Dead
much thanks to @gary_host_laptop for the logo design :)
Proton are very transparent about what data is and isn’t stored, how data is protected and what (very limited) data may be available in the event of a legal warrant - going through all the proper channels.
Complying with legal warrants doesnt make the service insecure or not private. It makes it a legal and legitimate company.
It shouldn’t really be a surprise to any of it’s users.
Some people have the idea that a private business is going to break the law or defy their governments requests for them. That’s completely deluded, nobody would ever open willingly expose themself to that kind of risk. No organization is going to let themselves go on trial for $15/month. It seems we have a binary idea of privacy, when the reality is much more complex.
It's the "if you're not with us, then you're against us" mentality.
Huh, I guess these people haven't been roaming the real world for a long time, they get their ideas from television shows and movies.
I agree with you these people think that Proton will fight and protect you for $11 a month. Lol we really have to keep in mind that companies will comply to a government request its on you to keep your data secure and communications encrypted.
Even if your messages are encrypted, you still leak a lot of data (aka metadata)
Yes you are right. But as Michael Bazell said just expect that everything you said its going to be leak.
The best take on here. The reasonable one that still highlights how much better it is compared to other mainstream services
Remember that time I think it was Signal got a warrant for all data they had on a user and literally all the data they had was account name, creation date, and last login date? That was funny.
Well, in the US, FISA warrants are technically legal, too.