The Edward
Snowden revelations triggered a large-scale movement worldwide towards
deploying encryption across the Internet for secure services, which is
something the government agencies like NSA and GCHQ have targeted repeatedly,
as exemplified by abruptly shutting down Lavabit,
a Texas-basedEncrypted Email Service.
In response, a group of young developers at the European
Organization for Nuclear Research (CERN) has launched a new email
service which offers end-to-end encryption and securing communications
that could put an end to government snooping and will keep away our personal
data from prying eyes.
PROTONMAIL - AN END-to-END ENCRYPTED EMAIL
This new encrypted email service, called ProtonMail is a super-secure
email service created in collaboration with the scientists from Harvard,
the Massachusetts Institute of Technology and the European research lab CERN.
ProtonMail offers a user-friendly experience with full “end-to-end” encryption. It encrypts the data on the
browser before it communicates with the server, therefore only encrypted data
is stored in the email service servers. So, even if someone gains complete
access to the server, it will find only the encrypted data. Moreover,
there is even a “self-destruct” feature in the email service which ensures your
emails are only available for a limited period of time.
“We've basically separated the message that’s encrypted
apart from the key – all the encryption takes place on your computer instead
of our servers, so there’s no way for us to see the original message,”
one of ProtonMail's creators, Andy Yen, told Forbes.
PROTONMAIL BASED IN SWITZERLAND
The company is based in Switzerland, so it won't have to
comply with American courts’ demands to provide users data. In worst case, if a
Swiss court ordered to provide data, they can get only the heaps of encrypted
data as ProtonMail doesn’t store the encryption keys.
The service has just been released in its beta phase. “All
user data is protected by the Swiss Federal Data Protection Act (DPA)
and the Swiss Federal Data Protection Ordinance (DPO) which offers some of the
strongest privacy protection in the world for both individuals and entities.
Only a court order from the Cantonal Court of Geneva or the Swiss Federal
Supreme Court can compel us to release the extremely limited user information
we have," the site reads.
The service is currently in public beta and the team
is working on Android and iOS apps as well, which has to launch by the end of
the summer. Due to encryption based service, it cannot be used to serve
targeted ads, such as Google AdSense, and is currently free.
But in near future, the company is planning to offer premium
accounts which will accept bitcoin payments, due to the concern of an
additional level of security and anonymity.
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