ProtonMail Could Reroute Connections Through Google To Circumvent Censorship (venturebeat.com) 9
Proton Technologies, the company behind encrypted email provider ProtonMail, has announced plans to circumvent censorship by routing connections to its servers through third-party infrastructure, which may include Google -- a company that ProtonMail has long been critical of over its privacy practices. From a report: Proton, which was founded out of Switzerland in 2013 by academic researchers working on particle physics projects at CERN, promises ProtonMail users full privacy via client-side encryption, meaning that nobody can intercept and read their emails -- it has frequently positioned itself as the antithesis of Gmail, which serves as a vital cog in Google's advertising wheel. ProtonMail, on the other hand, has emerged as a prominent privacy-focused alternative, used by companies and individuals -- including White House staffers and activists -- wishing to sidestep snoopers.
Thus, ProtonMail has faced its fair share of censorship, with the likes of Turkey, Belarus, and Russia all blocking the service in recent times. This is something that Proton is now pushing harder to counter with its new backup solution. The new tool, which will be deployed over the next few weeks in the ProtonMail desktop and mobile apps, is designed to sidestep any blocks imposed by network administrators, internet service providers (ISPs), or governments.
Thus, ProtonMail has faced its fair share of censorship, with the likes of Turkey, Belarus, and Russia all blocking the service in recent times. This is something that Proton is now pushing harder to counter with its new backup solution. The new tool, which will be deployed over the next few weeks in the ProtonMail desktop and mobile apps, is designed to sidestep any blocks imposed by network administrators, internet service providers (ISPs), or governments.
Nice, but maybe first... (Score:5, Insightful)
Maybe first they should have stopped voluntarily giving connection data to governments.
https://www.theregister.co.uk/... [theregister.co.uk]
Presently happy customer (Score:3)
Please dont fsck it up, for the love of FSM.
Basic plausibility (Score:2)
If it's well encrypted on send and retrieval, the intermediate infrastructure shouldn't matter.
Remember domain fronting? (Score:5, Informative)
Russian block had nothing to do with Censorship (Score:2)
He has been sending mass mailings about bombs in schools, hospitals, the Moscow subway, the parliament - you name it. On a bad day up to 2000 sites with bomb threats and in some cases up to 30K bomb threats in a month. He used Proton mail for a period of time as a source.
Proton mail was asked to cooperate, and AFAIK it initially ignored the Russian request. They put a blo
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Swiss encryption company, eh? (Score:1)