fivefives55555 11 hours ago

I've been following this on X/Twitter and I think one of the most egregious things that's important to point out is that folks from Phrack reached out to Proton in private multiple times, and Proton ghosted them. Proton only engaged with them and then reinstated the accounts after Phrack went public and their X/Twitter post went viral.

It also looks like one of the writers filed an appeal with Proton and Proton denied the appeal, so they manually investigated the incident and refused to reinstate the account and then only did after this got attention on X/Twitter.

So make no mistake about it: Proton didn't just disable the accounts after whatever CERT complained, which would have been bad enough - they also didn't do anything about it until this started getting lots of eyes on social media.

  • eek2121 8 hours ago

    Proton does not require a shred of proof that you are a real human being either, fyi. I'm not actually attacking them for this specifically, because I feel that we need privacy focused tools, however the fact that I was able to create a few hundred proton email addresses in seconds by injecting usernames/passwords was scary, even to me. I'm surprised they aren't on spam block lists worldwide. Their captcha is child's play that a script can defeat with simple image examination. i encourage them to buff up their spam controls, just a bit, and decrease moderation by a lot unless they can promptly deal with cases such as this.

    • immibis 7 hours ago

      Their controls are buffed up: all of those accounts are linked due to having been created with the same IP address. If one is blocked, they all are. If you try to circumvent this with a well-known proxy (such as Tor or a V"P""N") you will find that captcha activation will not exist as an option.

      • crossroadsguy 3 hours ago

        That definitely doesn't look good for privacy POV. If they do not want abuse, they ought to use other means. They should not associate IPs with account creation. That is kind of scary. In fact, if what you have said is true, then one's account can be blocked by someone else's mischief on the same IP, which is not very uncommon at all i.e sharing the IP.

        • Yoric 3 hours ago

          How else?

  • overfeed 6 hours ago

    I'll go out on a limb and say it: it's an American cybersecurity agency. Proton's CEO/Proton[1] loves the current US admin. I wouldn't be surprised if they comply now and ask questions later, if at all.

    1. According to the now-deleted Reddit comment from the official Proton account glazing Republicans, so I assume they were speaking on behalf of all of Proton. https://theintercept.com/2025/01/28/proton-mail-andy-yen-tru.... I have zero evidence except for the CEOs questionable public statements, but I wouldn't be surprised if Proton turned out to be the 21st century Crypto AG.

    • nerpderp82 6 hours ago

      Proton is a honey watering hole pot. This has always been clear.

    • neobrain an hour ago

      > Proton's CEO/Proton[1] loves the current US admin

      The CEO once expressed support for Gail Slater as head of antitrust and subsequently criticized lack of effective work towards tech regulation on the Democratic side in the same social media thread.

      Calling that "love for the current US admin" (which hadn't even taken office when those statements were made) is pure disinformation.

    • Yiin 6 hours ago

      if I didn't knew better, that would sound plausible, but the truth is much more boring (for the better)

  • a0123 10 hours ago

    Which the reddit fanatics on their sub are bending over backwards to defend and explain away when there is no two ways about it tbh.

  • baxtr 9 hours ago

    On a positive note: having reach on social media can solve problems nowadays.

    • nicce 8 hours ago

      The effect is opposite - things get fixed only when you get enough social noise and that is not good.

    • Dilettante_ 3 hours ago

      Isn't that like saying "Yay, rich people get to bend the law", certainly useful to some, but kind of a weird thing to cheer for?

    • zapzupnz 7 hours ago

      So, if you have sufficient influence, you can get things moving.

      What about those of us nobodies with no influence?

      • jackstraw42 7 hours ago

        well, you can't get the same stuff done that the folks with influence can. like they're working with a better toolbox.

        • fn-mote 7 hours ago

          Which is all cool until Google rug-pulls your influence and you’re back to zero… in which case it doesn’t sound like a tool anymore.

          Maybe a tool with DRM embedded would be an appropriate analogy?

          • 8cvor6j844qw_d6 6 hours ago

            One of the reasons why I don't use my personal Google accounts for stuff like Firebase.

            • bigiain 5 hours ago

              Sadly, Proton was, until now, a serious and perhaps leading contender for where I might migrate my email as I reduce my dependence on Google. They felt more credible then Tutanova, and less mainstream corporate than Fastmail. Not sure where to look now.

    • brookst 8 hours ago

      And there’s no shortage of people excited to hop on the next outrage train.

      With good cause, in this case, but the crowds wielding pitchforks don’t much care either way.

  • j-bos 10 hours ago

    > Phrack reached out to Proton in private multiple times, and Proton ghosted them.

    According to Proton's response in the linked reddit post: https://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=45227356

    They say: "Regarding Phrack’s claim on contacting our legal team 8 times: this is not true. We have only received two emails to our legal team inbox, last one on Sep 6 with a 48-hour deadline. This is unrealistic for a company the size of Proton, especially since the message was sent to our legal team inbox on a Saturday, rather than through the proper customer support channels."

    • commmentator 10 hours ago

      You'll note that Proton's PR only mentions the second date - " last one on Sep 6 with a 48-hour deadline."

      Proton doesn't mention that the first email from Phrack which Proton ignored was weeks prior to that, which is what led to the second email in the first place.

      You'll also note that Proton doesn't mention that their Abuse Team refused to re-anable the account after the article author did the appeals process, as per Phrack's timeline at the top of their article.

      • j-bos 10 hours ago

        That's a great point. I guess at this point it'd be ideal for them to treat this an incident and do a proper postmortem with timelines and decision calculus.

        • commmentator 10 hours ago

          Definitely agree. A frank postmortem would be a good thing to see.

        • alsetmusic 10 hours ago

          But that would be contrary to their clear intention thus far: to sweep this under the rug. /s

          I had previously liked Proton. I started seeing bits and pieces of info about their security being lackluster over the past year or so, causing doubt about their credibility. I'm definitely done with them after this.

          • Insanity 8 hours ago

            This is honestly sad to see. I use Proton and advocate it to others. This does make me rethink my position somewhat - although I’d argue it’s still better than Google / Microsoft-owned email services.

    • nsagent 10 hours ago

      To be honest, I've found Proton's public customer service representatives to be very duplicitous, so it's hard to take their word at face value. It's pretty ridiculous to see their response to legitimate concerns start with: "That doesn't sound right..." 80-90% of the time.

    • BLKNSLVR 3 hours ago

      > a 48-hour deadline. This is unrealistic for a company the size of Proton

      and yet suspending the account...

    • crossroadsguy 3 hours ago

      That thread looks like a cesspool of fans fawning and downvoting anyone questioning them.

    • a0123 10 hours ago

      Sorry but doubt.

      The whole "we have only received two emails" is a classic move of every company caught with their pants down. Considering Proton's history, they don't get the benefit of the doubt on this one.

      As for the "company size excuse" sorry but considering the business you claim to be in (the private and secure email), having an on-call skeleton crew legal team available over the weekend for urgent requests is a bare minimum (and I'm pretty sure they have people available to hand over everything the cops request if "the proper process is followed").

      Remember that they have turned over information in less than 24 hours before (for what they call an extreme case of course). So the "size" excuse doesn't hold. Doesn't matter how urgent it is, if they are the small bean they claim they are, there is no chance they can have a turnaround of less than 24 hours.

      Again, it's not what they did that's the biggest issue, it's the coverup. Just like last time they got in hot water. Because the coverup raises a lot more questions.

      • KingOfCoders 4 hours ago

        If you don't have enough people to run your business you're doing it wrong. If you don't have enough money to hire people for your business, it's not a viable business.

johnklos 7 hours ago

The true value of a company can be measured by our ability to communicate with them. If we can't communicate except after public outrage, then what does that say about the company?

Here's a genuine question: is Proton Mail the least shitty of companies that provide email services?

I self-host email and will continue until I die. But for others who need a company to do this for them, is Proton Mail the least shitty of options? Does this change the evaluation? I'm genuinely curious about the opinion of others here.

  • crossroadsguy 3 hours ago

    To answer your question, from my limited experience: no.

    There are better or less shitty companies like Fastmail, Runbox (tried them), even Purelymail (but 1 or 2 people setup), Mailbox (shitty support, solid setup; I am a customer), Migadu (good name, I have never used them), there's Tuta (but somehow they seem off to me; like Proton they also do not allow IMAP/POP - Proton allows with some circus), MXRoute has good name at places like LET forum. There's even Zoho if you just a mail service (but then if you use Zoho then only reason to not use Google or MSFT will be cost or just the middle finger :D) … and many more.

    So there are options.

    PS. as per self hosting email - I can't self host my seedbox properly on a VPS, I don't think I should even try email :)

    • cedws 3 hours ago

      Not allowing IMAP/POP isn’t just for the lulz, it’s not compatible with the encryption architecture Proton uses, which is kind of the selling point of the product. You can either have your emails encrypted at rest with your key OR you can have plain IMAP/POP without a bridge client, you can’t have both.

      • crossroadsguy 3 hours ago

        Did I anywhere say it was for the "lulz"?

  • jegp 5 hours ago

    What's your stack? After reading this, self hosting suddenly appeals to me.

    • _kidlike 2 hours ago

      forget about self hosting email... I tried it for years, and even if you get it working (needs months), it will eventually stop working again. The problem is that in order to get the big boys to accept you as an email provider, you have to jump through infinite hoops, and be treated like a criminal and/or scammer in the meantime (or at best a business that is trying to send newsletters). You will never get a human to talk to, it's just an infinite loop of automated processes.

      Anyway, the problem is "trust" which boils down to IP reputation. And since we are all still on ipv4, your IP was reused. Which means you need to spend months cleaning it. And you won't have a guarantee that you won't lose this IP in the future.

    • BLKNSLVR 3 hours ago

      Not who you asked, but I self-host some non-critical mail domains using Mailu[0], which is a set of docker containers. It's been fairly low maintenance. Ease of setup depends on your technical knowledge, but if I can do it, and you're on HN asking the question, you'll probably manage.

      [0]: https://mailu.io/

    • thr0w4w4y1337 2 hours ago

      So, now you have to worry about your VPS/Internet provider deplatforming you. Or about your domain name being seized. And spam filtration, backups, redundancy...

      I'm not saying email self hosting should not be done, I just say a bit of planning should be done.

      DNS seems like the most annoying part, it is SPoF by design. The problem can be mitigated, but seems like cannot be solved. For example, owning multiple domain names in multiple jurisdictions. And round-robin them. You cannot eliminate SPoF for any one specific service you want to login using email. But you won't lose access to everything at once.

      Edit: P.s. At the same time, owning your domain for mail seems to be one of the most impactful things to do to reduce digital serfdom. Banned at *mail? Just switch those MX records and go on.

    • seszett 3 hours ago

      OpenSMTPd + Dovecot is extremely easy to setup and maintain.

      For my parents, I registered a domain on OVH and they use the free email accounts they come with. So that's an independent, ready to migrate, email account for about 8 euros per year.

chatmasta 8 hours ago

Proton dropped from the top spot on my list of “user-first email platforms” when they announced they’ll be deleting accounts that haven’t logged into their service in some arbitrary amount of time. If I can’t rely on my email / messaging / phone / communications provider to keep an open line for as long as I need it – whether that’s one year or two years or twenty years, then I’m not going to use it. And if they require payment in exchange for providing that service, then it better accept privacy-preserving payment, but even then, I’m probably not going to use it.

Proton had a great thing going where their VPN service and business service funded the cost of maintaining free accounts. The fact that they chose to destroy years of trust by announcing a deletion policy, indicated to me that they no longer care about their users more than they care about running a business.

I’m not even asking for something unreasonable. It’d be one thing if they didn’t want to maintain free accounts with no activity but hundreds of gigabytes of storage. But they haven’t stratified the limit by storage usage. If you’ve got a free account consuming a few megabytes of storage, maybe an email you setup for the government service you interact with every few years… well you better make sure you remember to do the arbitrary chore of logging into that account every year, or Proton will just delete it, no questions asked.

Maybe they’ll send you some reminders if you gave them a “recovery” email, but that defeats the point of signing up to a privacy-preserving email service and calls into question the premise that they even are one.

(In related news, I need to text myself on Google Voice every few months or they’re gonna delete the number I use for 2FA on critical services… and this is an account that has $4 of credit loaded into it from ten years ago…)

nsagent 10 hours ago

I've need a paying subscriber to Proton since 2018, but I recently canceled my subscription (which ends in November). I just got fed up with the constant bugginess and jankiness of their offerings.

Any suggestions for mail hosting and VPN? I hear good things about Fastmail and mailbox.org (I see they very recently rebranded to just mailbox and revamped their offering).

Also, I've been a heavy user of the SimpleLogin alias service. Any suggestions for easily porting all those accounts to a new provider? Manually changing each and every account to a new email seems painful.

  • 0xbadcafebee 9 hours ago

    Fastmail is fine. It's somewhat limited in its UX, but technically speaking, everything works, and it's snappy. Very few outages. I really like their integrations with calendars, contacts, and mail for 3rd party sites/services. Not a ton of features or deals re: custom domains or multiple users, but it's fine if it's just for yourself. edit They literally -JUST- turned on Offline support for their app and web interface, so my only real complaint is gone. Go with Fastmail.

    For a VPN, what do you need it to do? For tinfoil hat privacy stuff, get a VPS in Estonia or something. If you just want a secure tunnel while working remote, get a WiFi access point with Wireguard and Dynamic DNS at your home (it's free plus you probably have more bandwidth).

    • crossroadsguy 3 hours ago

      Hey, what's the trick of keeping your VPS OS/etc updated and upgraded without having to nuke (or replace or copy to elsewhere and "paste" back) the current setup on that VPS? In all my self hosting attempts it works butter smooth until I try to update/upgrade my VPS OS or hell even the app I am using like a VPN, or a seedbox, a notes app etc etc. I mean it's been really painful. Sometimes I have used the VPS w/o updating for 3-4 years - no security/OS update - none. The moment I do that - bam! Everything broken or gone :(

    • akshitgaur2005 an hour ago

      > get a WiFi access point with Wireguard and Dynamic DNS at your home

      Could you elaborate more on this?

    • jwrallie 6 hours ago

      But if you get a VPS your traffic will always be linked with a unique IP. VPNs have an advantage there.

      • bigiain 4 hours ago

        Most providers will hand you a new IP if you suspend then restart your instance. That at least spreads you pool of IPs across their AS (or some subset of it). For the price of a "reputable" VPN service, you could run 2 or 3 low end VPSes from different providers. A bit of Ansible, Python (or language of your choice), and perhaps some browser automation if the cheap VPN provider doesn't have a usable API - should allow you to automate provisioning VPN endpoints and rotating IP addresses.

        That would at least move your needle around a lot, even if it isn't bringing along the haystack of all the other VPN customers sharing their endpoint IP addresses. You couldn't consider this sufficient protection against TLAs or Mossad. Or disgruntled Magic The Gathering players burnt by MtGox...

  • idle_zealot 10 hours ago

    I'm using Fastmail and Mullvad. Both seem to work pretty well and are reasonably priced. You could also host your own on VPSs if you're feeling adventurous.

  • cscharenberg 7 hours ago

    I've been on Zoho for my (and my partner's) email for 4+ years and it has been great. Chose them because there is no per-domain charge, so I have like 12 domains on it.

    The configurability is extensive in both web app and ios email app. Service has been fast and stable. They rarely change anything in the UI (no random tinkering is what I mean) so it is predictable and easy to use.

    • raybb 6 hours ago

      I love https://purelymail.com/ for the same reason. Unlimited domains and you can pay based on usage. I pay about 1 cent per day.

      • shelled 3 hours ago

        I wanted to use them. But they had a bug in SMS sending and it's been a few weeks (or more) and they have not fixed it or been able to fix it. Also, it was not clear whether they use the same setup for recovery/alert SMS (I asked, received no reply). I tried following up with their support for a few days (it's a one-person setup; recently a support person was hired who responds on Discord and is apparently swamped), but it didn't happen. I just tried now and the issue still exists. That seemed like not a good sign. Also - ownership has changed few months ago.

    • skinner927 4 hours ago

      Also been using zoho for at least 6 years. Cheap and reliable.

    • elpalek 4 hours ago

      I wouldn't trust Zoho. More than 10 years ago, they shadowbanned (can not be shared or publicly viewed) my documents because it criticized Chinese communist party.

    • fuzztester 6 hours ago

      what are the charges?

      • skinner927 4 hours ago

        Entry level is $12/year. Bring your own domain.

  • crossroadsguy 3 hours ago

    I am a Fastmail customer. Absolutely horrible customer support but pretty solid email. Do not even think about using the "suit" they offer alongside email.

    The rebranding and "revamp" is limited to the logo and colour changes :D everything under the hood is still the same good old OX inferiority. Hell, you may never want to use their webmail either (my 99.9999% mail usage is via IMAP clients). They are fine other than that.

    Fastmail is pretty good if their price and offerings are not an overkill for you. You should check Runbox as well - really good.

    Simple Login alt: addy.io? Fastmail and Mailbox (auto-deletes in 30 days unless you "touch" it :D) also have disposable email as part of email offerings. Don't know about Runbox.

  • Modified3019 8 hours ago

    I moved to Fastmail a few years ago. No real complaints, and I’d definitely do it all over again.

    That said, because I’ve not experienced any failure, I’ve not experienced how well Fastmail handles failure, which is the real measure of a company.

  • citizenpaul 3 hours ago

    Fastmail has an open source API they call jmap. You could probably find or write something that could help convert to the fastmail masked email. I was able to setup an integration with a local llm to read my email and act on it in about an hour.

    I like fastmail they seem to have a move slow and don't break things mentality that I like from my email.

  • esseph 10 hours ago

    > constant bugginess and jankiness of their offerings

    This is something I had not heard (also have been a paying user for a very long time).

    I've never encountered a bug, to my knowledge. I did dislike that when they released photo storage they didn't have a proper search feature.

    • teekert 10 hours ago

      Same here, no bugs in Proton apps and I’m still a happy subscriber.

    • throwway120385 10 hours ago

      For me the jank is in their billing and the plans I can purchase. I can either have a Business Mail Essentials plan or a Business Password plan, but if i want both at the same time I have to buy a plan that's three times as expensive or drop my custom domain name.

      • esseph 9 hours ago

        I do dislike their billing options when it comes to feature / service selection.

    • nsagent 9 hours ago

      Proton seems to have a lot of cheerleaders that come out of the woodwork when anyone complains. I'm happy that somehow their code is magically bug free for you, since you've somehow never encountered any bugs whatsoever in their code (despite their release notes mentioning literal bugs they've fixed).

      I'm glad it works for you, but their offering is frequently buggy and broken for me.

      • dotnet00 9 hours ago

        It'd be useful if you pointed out bugs instead of just implying that anyone who doesn't share your experience is some sort of shill

        • nsagent 4 hours ago

          The person I was responding to literally said they were "a paying user for a very long time" and "never encountered a bug". No software is bug free. I can't think of a single software service I've used for as long as Proton (7 years now) where I haven't encountered a single issue over that time. I take their statement to be so incredibly unlikely as to be facetious or intentionally duplicitous.

          So I responded in kind, because I've definitely seen company cheerleaders, and I'll have no part of it. I'm glad you all are happy with Proton. I'm not telling you to leave.

          And if you really want to see complaints, you don't have to look far. Read the other comments on this thread. I don't have to spell everything out for you.

          • esseph 2 hours ago

            Idk what to tell you. Email is mostly a solved problem for most cases, and object storage is mostly the same. Password manager is one of the best I've found in any platform, at least for the individual-user use case.

            The VPN has always just worked, too.

            If you're using desktop apps for things, really can't help you there as I have no experience with any proton offerings for that piece.

      • esseph 9 hours ago

        I would imagine this is the universal case, otherwise they would be out of business.

        People that feel very satisfied or dissatisfied with something are most likely to comment. I've just been very satisfied.

  • newscracker 3 hours ago

    For mail hosting, take a look at Posteo.de (no custom domains though), mailbox.org, runbox.com, mailfence, migadu, and cranemail. All these are cheaper and a lot more affordable than something like Fastmail. All of them support IMAP, using which you can move your email elsewhere (or easily backup/have local copies).

  • const_cast 8 hours ago

    My experience is the apps are missing very fundamental features. Which would be fine... If you could use other clients. But you can't, except for email, kind of.

    Like, the calendar on mobile doesnt even have a search function. What if I want to know when an event is happening? I just have to scroll and scroll until I find it? Come on now. Also no storage backup in proton drive??? What??? That's, like, 90% of the purpose of proton drive!

    • j-bos 8 hours ago

      Yeah I was really disappointed they released their llm service before making an official proton drive linux client.

  • 8cvor6j844qw_d6 6 hours ago

    Similar case, I recently migrated from @mozmail to SimpleLogin and wondered if I made the right choice.

    I heard using your own domains solves the migration issue but that makes your email pretty identifiable just by looking at your domain.

    I wonder whats a suitable replacement candidate after Mozmail and Simple Login? One of the reasons I migrated away from Mozmail to Simple Login was that you can't initiate a email sending, which made it difficult to contact support if needed. Plus Mozmail are on Amazon SES.

    • crossroadsguy 2 hours ago

      You mean Firefox Replay right? It has been in beta for a long time (I mean anything other than the basic free plan). Did you get in via some invite or so?

      https://relay.firefox.com right? Or there's another service?

      > that makes your email pretty identifiable

      Agreed. I have also stopped abusing the catch-all of my domains. It became a pain very soon. Not only privacy issues but I couldn't possibly block those emails/spam that were coming on usernames like sales and many more.

  • aryonoco 9 hours ago

    I moved from Proton to Fastmail (and Mullvad for VPN).

    I was a a founding paying member of Proton Mail. I loved them and evangelised them for years. But after a decade, the quality of the offering, especially the mail and calendar, is almost a joke, and the company seems very distracted chasing the next big thing (the half baked password manager being one).

    Comparing Fastmail’s UI and feature set with Proton, you quickly realise they are leagues apart.

    And no Fastmail doesn’t provide e2e encryption. For that I use Signal, and for the few occasions where I need e2e encryption in email, I use PGP.

    My only wish is that there was more client support for JMAP protocol. Even thunderbird doesn’t support it, and I can’t go back to IMAP because I like labels. Thankfully Fastmail’s own web interface is so good it is not a big issue.

  • DanOpcode 8 hours ago

    I recently moved from Gmail to Migadu and started to use my own domain instead. Works great so far

    • chanux 3 hours ago

      I've used Migadu since their free plan days. Even though I had trouble in the transition (partly due to my fault) it was handled decently and I stayed on. Been friction less since. I must also mention Edison e-mail, which makes such a great client!

  • 2cents5ewe27366 10 hours ago

    I've been happy with Startmail, good customer service, they don't offer any of the non-email cloud services though.

  • calvinmorrison 9 hours ago

    Fastmail is a good product with technical chops, contributes to open source and cares generally about being good members of the international email space, standards etc.

    Fastmails interface is very plain, and it works very fast and works well.

    They support a plethora of ways to do mail and have many advanced users so their mail support is very good, maybe close to running your own mail server without having to deal with rbls and getting spamlisted

  • mulmen 10 hours ago

    I use Fastmail and I’m mostly happy with it. Their design team is thoughtless so their web and mobile offerings are disappointing. The mail hosting itself seems to be excellent though.

gruez 11 hours ago

Can proton even win here? The obvious solution would be "we don't take down unless there's a court order", but then you'd get exposé pieces saying how protonmail is a den for drug dealers/pedophiles/doxxers/cyber criminals.

  • autoexec 10 hours ago

    > The obvious solution would be "we don't take down unless there's a court order", but then you'd get exposé pieces saying how protonmail is a den for drug dealers/pedophiles/doxxers/cyber criminals

    I think it'd be crazy to make a service worse because of worry over potential hit pieces that might whine about a perfectly reasonable policy. It isn't as if Proton Mail hasn't been accused of those things before anyway (along with accusations of being a honeypot and not private enough).

    It's better to have integrity and fight for your users than to cave just to avoid click bait articles by people with irrational views.

  • a0123 10 hours ago

    No.

    They currently do cooperate and they go get the odd bad press about this.

    So doing what they actually claim to do would change nothing. Their current stance is just a cop out.

  • vorpalhex 8 hours ago

    Yes.

    Most CERT requests are valid and good and should be obliged.. but there should be a manual check involved.

    Especially when an appeal is filed. Especially when the content is obviously security reporting.

    Both extremes are wrong - don't ignore CERTs and don't mindlessly oblige them. Find one of the many reasonable middlegrounds.

    • bigiain 4 hours ago

      > but there should be a manual check involved.

      I suspect there's a few email providers where the marketing and reputation management teams are hurriedly adding "check the user and the user's affiliated social media reach before suspending this account, and before responding to any support requests from the user."

      My new elevator pitch: We proactively research all of our customer's users and new signups to assign them a social media reach score. We then automate escalating external account action requests or user support calls for highly ranked users to senior staff and providing details and evidence of their social reach and industry affiliations. While we generate revenue from these customers, our primary revenue stream is the aggregated data we acquire while doing this, and selling access to that data to law enforcement, the insurance industry, and Nation State intelligence organisations across the globe.

BrandoElFollito 11 hours ago

The silence of proton can only be interpreted to their disadvantage. This is not very smart and will make everyone doubt on them.

While I like the idea of a safe and uncompromising service, proton seems less so now.

  • bigiain 4 hours ago

    Ladar Levison and Lavabit certainly earned themselves credibility there a dozen years or so back.

    Sadly https://lavabit.com/ currently just says "We are not accepting new users at this time. Mail services remain online, while we work on improving our website code. "

drnick1 5 hours ago

As far as I can remember, you don't even get IMAP access on the Proton free tier. For me, that's a non-starter. The privacy claims are also mostly marketing, as it is basically impossible to verify what Proton actually does when approached by a three-letter agency. I wouldn't use email anyway if I had something to hide, the email protocol wasn't designed with secrecy of communications in mind. For that, Signal seems far better, or perhaps a self-hosted, encrypted Matrix room.

antonymoose 10 hours ago

PSA: Proton deletes “unused” accounts after one year, and defines unused in some opaque sense where receiving but not sending emails is “unused” so I’m in a nasty position of my iCloud account being unrecoverable. Going to have to spend nontrivial time off boarding my account.

  • coppsilgold 10 hours ago

    > defines unused in some opaque sense where receiving but not sending emails is “unused”

    "You are considered active if you log in and use our services once a year. Simply logging in to any Proton service on our web, desktop, or mobile apps at least once a year is enough."

    <https://proton.me/support/inactive-accounts>

    • antonymoose 9 hours ago

      I had the mobile app and login. That wasn’t enough. Reading emails was not enough.

      • dotnet00 9 hours ago

        I almost never use my protonmail to send emails, just reading, mostly on phone too. Has been fine so far.

  • nicce 10 hours ago

    Do they still use that old shady billing? You could get "credits" from coupon to upgrade your plan, and once it ends, it automatically subscribes and your account bill goes to negative. Unless you pay that, your account is locked. Happened to me some long time ago and haven't used Proton since.

  • NullPrefix 9 hours ago

    Is this for paid accounts too? If you prepay for 5 years and get lost at sea for 3 years, should you expect your proton to still work?

drnick1 8 hours ago

And this is why I host my own email server, even if I am not a journalist investigating governments or anything of the sort. It's a matter of control over my computing.

  • abnercoimbre 6 hours ago

    Common folklore is that this is extremely onerous to self-host (and have it work successfully.) How did you go about it?

    • drnick1 5 hours ago

      The common folklore is just FUD. The main issue is deliverability to the likes of Google, Microsoft, Yahoo, etc. You need a clean fixed IP in non-residential block and a sufficiently aged domain or your mail will be flagged as spam or rejected. Alternatively, you can use a relay service for outbound email. Besides the deliverability issue, hosting email is fairly trivial from a technical standpoint; on Linux, the standard utilities are Postfix, Dovecot and OpenDKIM. The server is for my own use, so I don't even bother with spam and AV filters.

      Even if you can't send email at all (unlikely if you use an outbound relay), there are very significant privacy benefits to having your own server. I send very few emails relative to the number I receive. You couldn't pay me enough to go back to one of big commercial providers.

      • bigiain 4 hours ago

        > You need a clean fixed IP in non-residential block

        Feels like that's carrying a lot of load there?

        Where do you get those? I doubt any inexpensive VPS provider has any clean IP addresses? AWS charge you $5/month for an elastic IP address, and I bet you'd need to cycle through their pool of those looking for one that hasn't been blacklisted recently?

        There's another thing to consider here too. I was selfhosting my own mail, but back in 2013/14 I investigated all my mail, and even though I'd avoided Google/Microsoft,Yahoo et al. - over 80% of my personal email was on their servers because that's where my correspondents were. I pretty much gave up maintaining my own (slightly over complicated) stuff and gave in and chose to accept the "Do no evil" company at face value. 4 or 5 years later that company no longer existed, even though they continue with the same name today.

      • crossroadsguy 2 hours ago

        If I may say so, did you not just show in this very comment that that common folklore about self-hosting email "successfully" is not really FUD? :D

rvnx 10 hours ago

It is very naive to believe that email providers and VPNs do not have to respect the laws.

If this would be the case they would not be approved by any payment providers at all.

On top of that, add the possibility that hosting companies and upstream network peers would shut them down.

  • Hizonner 10 hours ago

    And what specific law did you have in mind, exactly?

    You do know what law required Proton to act as it did at each step in the story, right? You wouldn't just come up with random non-sequiturs, right?

Ey7NFZ3P0nzAe an hour ago

I'm worried and surprised to see the many comments here that, contrary to what I'm used to reading here, nobody seems to have dug deeper, looked critically at the evidence. Quite a lot of just ad hominem and insinuations.

This looks like brigading to me. Which is the only way for govs to fight against protonmail: spreading doubt.

Hence I am reinforced to continue being a strong supporter of Proton.

segmondy 10 hours ago

When people show you themselves, believe them. Proton is no longer to be trusted. Use at your own risk.

sitzkrieg 10 hours ago

proton always glowed but just straight up bending to unnamed agencies puts em rank and file with every single other provider

  • lo_zamoyski 9 hours ago

    Is refusal realistic? It's nice in the abstract, but in practice, there are plenty of ways to coerce illegitimate compliance.

    • bigiain 4 hours ago

      No company is gonna seriously refuse when their jurisdiction's equivalent of the FBI or NSA turn up with a court authorised order. As James Mikkens said: "YOU'RE STILL GONNA BE MOSSAD’ED UPON"

      But it'd be nice to be able to expect your email provider to not cave in to a request from some other counties CERT organisation without pushing back for evidence and some sort of proper judicial authority behind the request.

SilverElfin 11 hours ago

I thought Proton was a confidentiality / privacy oriented thing. How do they even know who owns the accounts?

  • guywithahat 11 hours ago

    You can disable an account without knowing who owns it, although they do have credit card/payment information now, and I don't think new accounts get encryption services unless they pay.

    That said, if your inbox is encrypted, protonmail does so on the client side with a second password. They can maybe delete the account, but proton mail doesn't know what the encrypted data is. What happens to new emails sent to a disabled address is anyone's guess though. Honestly I think they're doing the best they can given the circumstances

    • gruez 11 hours ago

      >and I don't think new accounts get encryption services unless they pay.

      source? Their compare plans page specifically lists "End-to-end encryption" as a feature for their free plan.

      https://proton.me/mail/pricing#compare-plans

    • Sunspark 11 hours ago

      You are trusting them. They control the client, how the keys are created/stored, etc. Javascript, etc. If they were to suddenly turn one day, they could.

      This is the weakness of cloud services.

      • j-bos 10 hours ago

        Trusting them is almost guaranteed, but it doesn't have to be, sort of. The clients are opensource so you literally clone, audit, and run the clients locally.

        Full disclosure, I use Proton and overall trust them so unless I see strong evidence of abuse or lies on their part I'm inclined to post contextualizing comments on stuff like this, b/c well I don't wanna host my own mail server, at least not in prod.

      • rvnx 10 hours ago

        It is very possible for them to inject custom JS to a specific user.

        You are the bosses at Protonmail, do you want police at 6 am shaking your kids, seize all your devices, loose all agreements with PayPal and Visa/MasterCard, because you want to protect a guy who distributes child pornography or plans a terrorist attack ?

        No way, so you tap on the shoulder of the CTO and ask him to push a temporary update or turn on a feature flags, in order to collect the missing information.

        This is true for all companies who control the client.

        • bigiain 3 hours ago

          From what we (at least I) know, this wasn't the police in Switzerland waking up senior management.

          t was - without anyone admitting to it - probably KrCERT who requested the account suspension. KrCERT don't seem to have any legal jurisdiction in Switzerland.

          "KrCERT/CC, which is an internal division of KISA, is a CSIRT with national responsibility and a focal point of contact for Korea on international cybersecurity incident handling." -- https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Korea_Internet_%26_Security_Ag...

          I'd like to think if they 'tapped on the shoulder of the CTO ' of a company headquartered in Switzerland, he'd say "maybe, come back with an order from a relevant court or security agency in Switzerland and I'll get my team right on that".

      • HeatrayEnjoyer 10 hours ago

        Or just use an open source email client.

        I would expect their own apps to be open source, are they not?

        • j-bos 10 hours ago

          Indeed they are: https://github.com/ProtonMail

          If you, or someone else, like please audit the repos. Could be cool to see trusted forks of some of the clients.

        • balamatom 10 hours ago

          Using an email client requires a Proton Bridge thing that acts as a local IMAP/SMTP proxy: https://github.com/ProtonMail/proton-bridge

          As if disabling the issue tracker and stonewalling pull requests wasn't bad enough, seeing how it is built out of multiple layers that communicate via gRPC was what made me instantly lose all trust in Proton. I don't know who's been doing their hiring but just from one look at that kludge it's evident they've lost the plot altogether.

          (There's a third-party alternative called Hydroxide, but it's experimental. Haven't been able to send emails through it from Thunderbird yet, though I've only looked into this for a few hours recently.)

  • gruez 11 hours ago

    Second paragraph of the article:

    >But last month, Proton disabled email accounts belonging to journalists reporting on security breaches of various South Korean government computer systems following a complaint by an unspecified cybersecurity agency

  • mr90210 10 hours ago

    They all are until they get threatened.

    Soon or later we will default to analog means. It’s not looking good.

pagansRpedos 10 hours ago

It's because the journalists were covering the professor-student rape scandal at UIUC Champaign that was covered up by Champaign and other governing bodies.

daft_pink 11 hours ago

You either die a hero, or you live long enough to see yourself become the villain.

  • luqtas 10 hours ago

    not all heroes wear capes, much less releases personal AI assistant to navigate your own data while the MAIL CLIENT AND CALENDAR APP is on beta on Linux for YEARS

dotnet00 9 hours ago

Hmm going to wait and see how this plays out, maybe it's time to look at alternatives, assuming that my custom domain email isn't somehow locked to them.

0xbadc0de5 10 hours ago

Last time I checked, hacking was still a crime in most jurisdictions - even if the target is considered a geopolitical adversary. This sort of activity is also against the Proton ToS. Once KrCERT and Proton were alerted to this activity, they would have been legally obligated to act.

That's not to say I feel any sympathy to the target - who by all counts has done a fair bit of damage. But this sort of hacktivism / vigilantism simply isn't helpful. There's a high likelihood that one or more nation states / law enforcement agencies may have had active operations directed against this threat actor derailed by such activity.

tl;dr - If you're going to conduct such activities, practice proper OPSEC. And don't let your desire for attention / recognition take priority over staying on the right side of the law.

KingOfCoders 4 hours ago

From the Proton/X discussion in the Intercept article

"Big Tech CEOs are tripping over themselves to kiss the ring precisely because Trump represents an unprecedented challenge to their monopolistic dominance.”

They don't know how this is going, from what I see Trump threatens something not to change something, but to get something. If there is any anti-trust drive it's there to shake the tree, not to break up big tech. Trump loves big US corporations, like those in the 50s and 60s, those pre-Bell-breakup.

IncreasePosts 11 hours ago

So, is this a case where Random Cybersecurity/Tech Group mistakes responsible disclosure for hacking, and then reported it to Proton, which took their word for it and disabled the account?