jesse_dot_id46 minutes ago
Unsurprising.

If you don't want to receive the punishment for thought crimes, which is being threatened outright more loudly every day, it's increasingly difficult to actually have a dissenting voice online. Don't believe me? Set up a linux VM, Mullvad VPN with a killswitch, then run Tor browser. You MAY be able to get a TutaMail account, which requires a backup e-mail that disappears after a short period of time (allegedly), and then a Proton account with the TutaMail account as your required backup there, but all of the privacy-first "anonymous" services require some form of verification. Then, if the social media network isn't blocking you from signing up via a Tor exit nodes outright, you are immediately shadow banned.

I remain very annoyed with the massive number of engineers that are making it possible for people who can't figure out how to check their e-mail to utilize advanced technology to spy on us, steal our tax money, pervert the technologies we build, and indiscriminately murder innocent people.

We are a community of greedy ladder pullers and that's so disappointing.

emeril44 minutes ago
I generally just use tor browser and proton (verified through a disposable email address only accessed via the tor browser) - seems secure enough for me?

I use it often...

pixl9738 minutes ago
>annoyed with the massive number of engineers that are making it possible

Where you one that voted for laws that protected our privacy?

Where you one that upvoted comments in forums that said software engineers needed a standard ethics?

Where you one that downvoted every post saying we should have unions in software so we can protect ourselves as a group.

Or were you greedy like the rest of us saying, I don't want any of those things because I can make more money without it.

This is were the hunt for more money has taken us, and it only gets worse from here.

h4kunamata3 hours ago
People will never understand, Proton is a privacy based email server, it is not the dark web where you can do as you please without consequences.

Proton only has access to your IP and device ID, not your data. With IP and device ID, you can easily track an user like finding the ISP, etc.

Do you wanna do naughty things?? Don't use such services do to so.

And ironically,this 404 Media is the only place I found covering this information and they require you to login to read the whole thing.

Hmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmm red flag big time!!!!

wolvoleo1 hour ago
Yes it does have access to your data, at least any email coming from or going to another mail provider. Because those are not end to end encrypted. Only encrypted in transit (and even that is optional). So they need to handle the plaintext at the point of transmission.

I really don't like this about proton, they're always going on about their encryption but most emails they've seen in plain text on their SMTP servers. Because that's just how SMTP works. And so has the provider of the other party.

Once they've put them in your mailbox they can't decrypt them again but I always consider a single exposure a loss of confidentiality. The only emails this doesn't apply to are those from people using PGP (yeah all three of them) and those on proton themselves.

In my view this Achilles heel makes most of their protections irrelevant. But they still market it as if it's the email equivalent of signal, which actually can't see what you say at any point of transit. And non technical people have no idea about the difference.

Ps I'm not blaming proton for not having a technical solution for this because interoperability makes it an unsolvable problem. But I do blame them for their marketing around it.

observationist2 hours ago
Proton isn't opsec, it's just the best available commercial clearweb host that still has to follow all the laws and comply with warrants, but won't be arbitrarily selling your metadata or engaging in the adtech garbage.

Kagi is to google as proton is to gmail.

You get web mail, custom domains, decent security, decent spam detection, solid features, and no PII being sold. Nice, clean, simple - I like paying them money. I feel good about doing business with them, and I don't run into that often these days.

rationalist1 hour ago
Sounds like Fastmail, except Fastmail is less sketchy and has better deliverability.
wswin1 hour ago
What's sketchy about proton?
Andrex1 hour ago
> Do you wanna do naughty things?? Don't use such services do to so.

Is that really what happened here?

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Stop_Cop_City

xp8425 minutes ago
> Following Black Lives Matter protests in the US in 2014, funding for police training at all levels of government skyrocketed, and some cities proposed additional police training facilities. A similar facility was approved in New York City in 2015 following the police killing of Eric Garner, and also in Chicago following a string of police killings in that city between 2014 and 2016.[11]

Protestors: Police should have better training.

Police: Build big training center

Protestors: No, not like thaaaat!!

ok_dad7 minutes ago
Why do police need big training centers to learn about the constitution and our rights, escalation of force, etc? I learned all that stuff in a single room when I was in the military.

So yea, “not like that” indeed.

hunterpayne59 minutes ago
Look at the numbers for number of people who die from interactions with police (both armed and unarmed) and then compare that to the extra violent deaths that happen because of defund the police polices and then let us know what you find. Only then can you make the claim you are implying. Otherwise you are doing the conspiracy theory thing where you present random data and then imply the idea you are pushing.
bairrd36 minutes ago
Can you give me examples of where police were actually defunded?
rideontime2 hours ago
404 Media has an excellent track record and is very reputable, if you're saying the "red flag" applies to them.
RandomNickname10 minutes ago
Meh,they got their own agenda.

If the person or politics / group,they don't support then they have no problem just straight up making stuff up.

Like the hit piece of Elons Grok where it was "doxing" pornstars names,but in reality all it did was just search web online and got the info from the first website it could find.

But they made it seem like it was some hidden info that only Grok and Elon would know...

expedition322 hours ago
Journalists should work for free. Which means that they are going to be paid by governments and corporations to spout propaganda because everyone has a mortgage to pay off...
TechSquidTV1 hour ago
this
afavour2 hours ago
I really don’t think 404 Media having a login gate is a red flag. They’re a business that needs to make money and the alternative to subscriptions is ads, which would be exponentially worse for user safety than what exists today.
mandeepj24 minutes ago
>Proton is a privacy based email server, it is not the dark web where you can do as you please without consequences.

If you are so hard-pressed to do something, then maybe setup your own smtp server

mhitza2 hours ago
That's 404 media's approach. That's why I only read their headlines.

In theory you could open up your protonmail account over tor and with bitcoin (or does that not work anymore?).

Its been a good while since I tried them out. Why I don't recommend them anymore is because when I didn't extend my subscription in time (expecting an account downgrade), my mail was locked and emails hold on to as random. Allowed to login only for payment.

That was one red flag from me, the second was when they shared IP address logs of a French protestor. E̶v̶e̶n̶ ̶t̶h̶o̶u̶g̶h̶ ̶a̶t̶ ̶t̶h̶e̶ ̶t̶i̶m̶e̶ ̶t̶h̶e̶y̶ ̶h̶a̶d̶ ̶a̶ ̶n̶o̶ ̶l̶o̶g̶s̶ ̶p̶o̶l̶i̶c̶y̶,̶ ̶i̶f̶ ̶I̶ ̶r̶e̶m̶e̶b̶e̶r̶ ̶c̶o̶r̶r̶e̶c̶t̶l̶y̶.̶ ̶O̶r̶ ̶i̶f̶ ̶I̶ ̶d̶o̶n̶'̶t̶.̶

gruez2 hours ago
>the second was when they shared IP address logs of a French protestor. Even though at the time they had a no logs policy, if I remeber correctly. Or if I don't.

You probably aren't remembering correctly given that specifically have a "login logs" option that can be toggled on/off.

mhitza2 hours ago
Thanks for the update of the current state.

I think at the time there was confusion around their policies

"ProtonMail logged IP address of French activist after order by Swiss authorities"

https://techcrunch.com/2021/09/06/protonmail-logged-ip-addre...

encrypted_bird1 hour ago
I let my subscription expire and my account was never locked down or emailed held for ransom. I suspect there is another piece to the story you're either neglecting to mention or don't know.
mistyvales2 hours ago
You can still pay with cash!
tototrains2 hours ago
last time i tried they asked for an email to link the account to. I don't think they provide anonymous accounts anymore, but you can probably create one with another anonymous email.
robcohen2 hours ago
> Proton only has access to your IP and device ID, not your data.

I like Proton. I use Proton.

However, the problem with proton is that if you access your email via a web browser, there's nothing stopping protonmail (to my knowledge) from reading your email from within their webapp via JS. This type of attack could be targeted at the behest of authorities.

So, actually, Proton COULD read your email (IFF you use webmail).

gruez2 hours ago
>So, actually, Proton COULD read your email (IFF you use webmail).

The authorities can also read your self-hosted email if they had a warrant to search your house. Even if you enable FDE they can do a cold boot attack.

golem1448 minutes ago
I believe that you would not expect that level of interaction with LEAs for a "stop cop city" dude that hasn't even been charged with a crime.

I'd count that up as a hypothetical win of the self-hosted main in your own location.

If you are Dr. Evil, OTOH, other calculi apply.

encrypted_bird1 hour ago
Just out of curiosity, what is a cold boot attack?
gruez1 hour ago
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Cold_boot_attack

tl;dr they pull the decryption keys from your computer while it's still running, which of course it is because your mail server has to be up 24/7.

Tepix2 hours ago
What if you use encryption?
perching_aix1 hour ago
FDE stands for "Full Disk Encryption" in this context.
renewiltord1 hour ago
The only solution is blockchain
perching_aix2 hours ago
Is even that needed? Nothing e2ee about the emails you receive normally, they could just read them right away if they really wanted to. And that is to say nothing about the metadata.
netfortius2 hours ago
lucb1e2 hours ago
What device identifier are you referring to, something like the MAC addresses of your network cards? How are they retrieving that via a browser?
hypeatei2 hours ago
Proton doesn't really protect anything email related unless the recipient is also using protonmail. The article also points out they sought payment data, not "IP and device ID" information.
lucb1e2 hours ago
> unless the recipient is also using protonmail

Or any similar service from another vendor? Or hosts their own email. If someone using Protonmail emails me, their data is also not getting sold for example, it's just stored on my laptop

wolvoleo1 hour ago
Even if it's another self hosted service, proton still needs the plain text in order to send it to them with transit encryption only.

Proton does have interoperability with PGP/GPG but very few people use that because of its UX.

loteck1 hour ago
Where are the stories about all the other mail providers who routinely cough up everything about your email account, including full content, metadata, and full payment details, on a daily basis?

Proton is one of the few services who accepts anonymous payment, and cannot themselves provide encrypted content in cleartext. They cannot save you from yourself, though.

encrypted_bird1 hour ago
They accept anonymous payment? I could've sworn they require an account...
CodeWriter232 hours ago
This should surprise exactly nobody after it was disclosed back in [checks notes] 2021 that ProtonMail gave up user data to law enforcement and also changed their TOS.
gruez2 hours ago
>after it was disclosed back in [checks notes] 2021 that ProtonMail gave up user data to law enforcement and also changed their TOS.

You shouldn't even need that. A warrant isn't a strongly worded letter that they can just turn down. It's the law. Therefore you should assume that if the police can get a warrant, they can get your data. Even for people who don't follow the law (criminals), there's no guarantee they won't snitch on you.

brokensegue1 hour ago
they used to claim that being Swiss based protected them from warrants like this
gruez1 hour ago
Source? We need the exact claim here, because there's a fine line between "we're in switzerland, so warrants aren't a thing!" (outright false) and "we're in switzerland, which have better privacy laws than other countries!" (debatable).
latexr38 minutes ago
I’m not the person who made the claim, but a basic web search led me to this page on their blog:

https://proton.me/blog/data-privacy-abortion

Quote (emphasis theirs, in bold):

> Switzerland is a fundamentally different environment. Two of the things Switzerland is most famous for are also highly conducive to data protection: privacy and neutrality.

> When a law enforcement agency in the US requests user data from a Swiss company, it is illegal for that company to provide the data. At Proton, we reject all data requests from foreign agencies.

> Proton and other Swiss companies will only hand over user data when ordered to do so by a Swiss authority. And even then, Proton’s general policy is to challenge data requests whenever possible and only comply after all legal remedies have been exhausted.

So maybe your parent poster is confused? They do claim that being Swiss protects them from requests from foreign entities, but not Swiss entities. Which is what happened here, the Swiss authorities asked Proton for the data, then they handed it to the FBI.

Has Proton challenged the data and “only complied after all legal remedies have been exhausted”, though? That’s another question.

jojobas31 minutes ago
Swiss police requested the data and handed it to the FBI.
petcat3 hours ago
> The records provide insight into the sort of data that Proton Mail, which prides itself both on its end-to-end encryption and that it is only governed by Swiss privacy law, can and does provide to third parties.

Didn't Proton already say that they were physically relocating their servers outside of Switzerland because the Swiss government couldn't be trusted?

Although I guess the server location didn't matter in this case since all they wanted was the billing information and the credit card info to identify the person.

elashri2 hours ago
> Didn't Proton already say that they were physically relocating their servers outside of Switzerland because the Swiss government couldn't be trusted?

They said they want to relocate to Germany which I would say in a polite way, is much worse in this regard.

spelk2 hours ago
In what sense? Germany has among the strongest judicial oversight for invasion of privacy in Europe. Due process is followed when securing search warrants that provide access to subscriber data (Germany does not have administrative subpoenas like in the US and other countries).

Former attempts at surveillance have been struck down in the Bundesverfassungsgericht, and the right to privacy has even been affirmed for foreigners (as opposed to other countries like the US that reserve that foreign nationals have zero due process rights for invasion of privacy).

wolvoleo51 minutes ago
Germany has strong privacy protections against businesses. But not against the state as they consider themselves above suspicion.
spelk40 minutes ago
Is this a gut feeling, or is there a basis for this claim? My comment referenced solely due process in relation to the state.
VWWHFSfQ3 hours ago
> prides itself both on its end-to-end encryption

Their end-to-end encryption is pointless because the vast majority of any recipients will just leak the plaintext emails via their own account providers anyway. It only works under very specific circumstances (all parties are using it). I think their marketing overstates what their secure private email actually means.

_alternator_2 hours ago
Man 404 Media is really crushing it lately. Thanks to the team!
laweijfmvo1 hour ago
Proton won’t lock me out of my email because I accidentally sang a copyrighted song in a Youtube video. That’s why I use it, not because it’s the pirate bay for email.
latexr56 minutes ago
> Proton won’t lock me out of my email because I accidentally sang a copyrighted song in a Youtube video.

Is there a specific story you’re referring to? Mind sharing a link? I have no intention of disputing it, I just haven’t heard of that particular case.

coppsilgold1 hour ago
Does Proton store the payment information tied to an account for the duration of a potential chargeback period or indefinitely?

Whether they store such info for cryptocurrency payments as well (no chargeback risk) would be telling.

burnt-resistor31 minutes ago
Dumb Lavabit with extra privacy-washed marketing.
BoredPositron52 minutes ago
Proton = Privacy Theater. Always has been.
thegrim3354 minutes ago
Let me guess .. they weren't going after a "protestor" like the headline would try to lead you to believe.

"Authorities were investigating [them] for their connection to arson, vandalism and doxing"

And there it is.

scoofy41 minutes ago
I don't know what is in the water, but "I can do crimes, as long as it's part of a protest" seems to be what people actually think these days.

Civil disobedience means accepting punishment. Literally "letter from Birmingham jail" was sent from a jail in Birmingham for a reason.

kittikitti1 hour ago
Thank you for sharing. I was trialing Proton Mail but I will move away from it because of this. This is some teenage level crime and legitimate protesting that it threw away its reputation for.
SunshineTheCat3 hours ago
Wild that it says this on their site:

>Sign up with no phone number: Get a private email account without handing over more personal data than necessary, making it harder for advertisers, data brokers, and other services to track you online.

I guess it doesn't mention law enforcement so ¯\_(ツ)_/¯

gruez2 hours ago
I'm not sure what you were expecting here. If you have data and the police shows up with a warrant, you can't just tell them "nah we don't feel like it".
drnick147 minutes ago
You can do what Signal does: store basically no data, so that you don't have any data to hand over.
wat100002 hours ago
They could have used a VPN to connect to Proton and paid for their account with bitcoin or cash and then law enforcement would have had a very tough time. Instead, they paid with a method connected to their identity. Of course Proton handed it over when law enforcement came knocking.

If you don't want info being given to law enforcement by third parties, your best bet is to make it so that nobody else has access to it in the first place. You might get away with third parties that are in a jurisdiction unfriendly to wherever you live. Definitely don't hand over your info to a company in fricken' Switzerland and then be surprised when they comply with law enforcement requests for it.

ranger_danger3 hours ago
The article explains that the account was identified based on a credit card payment for a paid account, which does not invalidate the statement in question IMO. Perhaps we differ on the definition of "private" or something else, but unless all parties are using proton, email is inherently insecure and somebody can/will have a record of your communication regardless.
lucb1e2 hours ago
> unless all parties are using proton, email is inherently insecure and somebody can/will have a record of your communication regardless.

That the person you're exchanging messages with, has your messages, is hardly a surprise. Not everyone-but-Proton sells your data though so it's not quite that black-and-white

ranger_danger2 hours ago
You're not wrong, but I think it just means you can never be 100% safe, as even the recipient of your message may be secretly working against you.
expedition322 hours ago
When a SWAT team drops in nobody's gonna take a bullet for your emails.
renewiltord2 hours ago
This is disappointing. I would pay up to $10/month for an email provider who would go to jail for me.
gruez2 hours ago
renewiltord2 hours ago
Actually neat. No mail deliverable issues?
sam0x173 hours ago
Well I guess Proton cannot be trusted. You know what they say, centralization corrupts absolutely
dgxyz3 hours ago
What Proton sell you is reduction of anxiety. But that's a lie.

The whole idea of encrypted email is pointless. There's absolutely no guarantee it's encrypted in transit or encrypted at rest on any machines it transits through unless you encapsulate the messages with PGP and then you still leave a trail of envelopes everywhere. Any government who wants your data will come round and beat it out of you or the provider as best as they can. And if you have the pay the provider, as evidenced here, they can point to you and then beat you for it. Beating being metaphorical or otherwise.

Use any old shitty email provider and make sure you can move off it quickly if you need to. Standard IMAP, not weird ass proprietary stuff like proton. Think carefully what you do and say. Use a side channel for anything that actually requires security.

wolvoleo49 minutes ago
Thanks for pointing that out. I always do too. I'm always surprised how many people here aren't aware of this.
sithadmin3 hours ago
As a long time Proton customer...I am fairly certain Proton has always been completely upfront that they will comply with lawful requests for information from the Swiss authorities, if response is obligated by Swiss law. Therefore this isn't especially surprising.
bombcar3 hours ago
The key is and always has been to make sure that someone like Proton simply doesn't have the information so they can't give it away.
wolvoleo57 minutes ago
This is just impossible. If they're going to be sending your email to gmail then they need to see what's in it. So they will have the data at some point. You have to trust their brown eyes that they don't look at it while it's going through their inbound and outbound servers. But they're selling it as a technical protection, not a trust-based one.

Personally, if you want private Comms, just don't use email. The protocol is just not suitable.

WithinReason3 hours ago
Exactly, you can use bitcoin, even cash. You can even add credits with PayPal or a credit card, in which case Proton (I assume) won't remember your payment data. But if you attach credit card info permanently to your account then it can be retrieved.
ranger_danger3 hours ago
It's wild to me that people are downvoting this. Nobody is going to jail for you...
Anonbrit3 hours ago
I don't think any commercial entity can be trusted to break the law on behalf of customers who only pay a small fee each
thephyber3 hours ago
In this case, it was Swiss courts who forced them to comply, not foreign courts.

And from what little I can tell from the article, it was account payment data, not content from the account.

Proton was never designed or advertised to resist this kind of threat.

mystraline3 hours ago
Given they were praising Trump, Vance, and gang - I called it then.

I cancelled my Proton account when all of that hit Mastodon. Their VPN was good, but I dont support nazies and their toadies.

GolfPopper3 hours ago
I wasn't even aware of anything around Proton and specific US political parties. Thank you for your post, as it led me to some searching.

The single most useful link I found was this Reddit thread:

https://www.reddit.com/r/ProtonMail/comments/1i2nz9v/on_poli...

platevoltage34 minutes ago
Good enough reason to never trust them.
lucb1e3 hours ago
In trying to check this claim (I thought Proton did sensible things), I found that the submitted news article is not new at all:

> [Proton's] homepage touts that “With Proton, your data belongs to you, not tech companies, governments, or hackers.” However, [...] Proton previously handed over an IP address at the request of French authorities made via Europol to Swiss police. Yen wrote a Twitter post at the time, stating, “Proton must comply with Swiss law. As soon as a crime is committed, privacy protections can be suspended and we’re required by Swiss law to answer requests from Swiss authorities.” ---https://theintercept.com/2025/01/28/proton-mail-andy-yen-tru...

Big surprise: swiss company complies with swiss law!

And the same happened now, quoting the part of the submission that you can read without signing up:

> privacy-focused email provider Proton Mail handed over payment data related to a Stop Cop City email account to the Swiss government, which handed it to the FBI.

Anyway, regarding your claim, it's a whole rabbit hole of statements they made but broadly speaking it sounds like you're right: Vance supported legislation which Proton campaigned for and, subsequently (as of 2025-01), Proton loves the US Republican Party, believing they would stand up for 'the little guy'. To be fair, they bring some evidence that sound like it can be verified and back this opinion up somewhat, but even if it's a correct opinion on this sub-topic, it's still supporting authoritarianism. Anyway, this is where I'm going to stop trying to politically analyze their situation and just not recommend Proton anymore...