![]() “If you don’t own your private keys, you don’t own your email”. In my opinion, I would say the safest way to email, is with Criptext. I rather have physical ownership of my emails and encryption keys, than trust a jurisdiction and hopes that encryption can keep at bay nosy entities. On Criptext: “they” would need to have physical access to a device were you are logged in, save that you don’t log off.On ProtonMail: “they” could have access to your encrypted keys and emails on ProtonMail’s servers, “they” would have to decrypt.Side by side, lets say everything on both email services work as expected architecture wise… worst case scenario for both, we throw away the jurisdiction which happens frequently: Unlike ProtonMail that stores your encrypted keys and all emails on their servers, which allows ProtonMail users to access their emails through any browser, better accessibility but inherently flawed. All your emails are stored on your device alone, which means you‘re in control of your data at all times. The Criptext email service utilizes the open source Signal Protocol library, which protects your privacy and security throughout your entire Criptext experience.Ĭriptext doesn‘t store any emails in its servers. We actively work with our open source community to improve on the software in order to provide the best email experience. ![]() The beauty of Criptext is its simplicity:Īll your emails are locked with a unique key that‘s stored on your device alone, which means only you and your intended recipient can read the emails you send.Ĭriptext‘s source code is open to the entire privacy community to see. It’s important to point out that since Criptext doesn’t store your data, you’re not at risk should any breach take place. These occurrences joined the biggest data breaches of all time, ranking #2, #6, and #11 respectively.
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