![]() ![]() Signing mostly has negative privacy implications. Why do both? The obvious way to encrypt with an ECC key comes with authentication for free. The signature ensures that no one, not our server or any third-party adversary, changed the passphrase. > Each member of a calendar will have a copy of the same passphrase that is encrypted and signed using their primary address key. Once it is encrypted, your calendar key will be stored on the ProtonCalendar backend server.ģ2-byte passphrase: might be fine, depending on what those bytes are the interesting question is how much entropy it got generated from. > This calendar key will then be symmetrically encrypted (PGP standard) using a 32-byte passphrase that is randomly generated on your device. I'd expect my lawyers and accountants and such to use something like this.Īrticle is light on the details, but ProtonMail has published some here: I dunno maybe something like this exists?Ī system like this could make for encrypted form storage and messaging with the right API maybe hippa compliant? one click to save as pdf or zip or other safer password format, or save on protonServer longer. keep available on proton server for 48 hours after. I'd want my protonReaderApp to have default shred message after reading. then tap to checkbox so further emails to you from proton accounts send you a notice to check out the protonReadPortal instead of including the plain text. get an optional app for replies to your contacts that have proton accounts. ![]() If you'd like to keep this mail message private click to login to protonReadPortal - where you can read, and if you'd like make a passphrase, to reply and keep messaging on secure servers. ![]() Makes me wonder if its possible or reasonable to consider an option with protonmails (and similar) - have a note in the footer of the email - explaining that encrypted is default in their system, but sending to your email provider has it converted to plain text where others can access it. ![]()
0 Comments
Leave a Reply. |
AuthorWrite something about yourself. No need to be fancy, just an overview. ArchivesCategories |