I'm a happy ProtonMail user. I've never had an issue with the system and the web app is very pleasant to use.<p>However, I wonder when (if at all) they plan on encrypting more metadata...? Any of you users actually look at the network log of ProtonMail web app? Almost all effort goes in to encrypting just the body of the emails, while just about everything else is seemingly stored in plaintext (headers, subjects, senders, recipients, etc etc)
What is this? Since when did cloud hosted solutions announce version number changes? Is ProtonMail suddenly available as an open source self-hosted platform?
So wait, are they reintroducing ECC?<p>> This announcement is an example of why I am not using ProtonMail anymore. There are a lot of things they do that sound very good on marketing materials, but upon examination are security theater.<p>Quote: <a href="https://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=19747493" rel="nofollow">https://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=19747493</a><p>As a user for more than a year I've suffered data loss using the Bridge Client on macOS, seen (and have copies of) encrypted phishing emails originating from trusted TLDs and PM themselves, and well, if they fixed something in the new release I'd really hope it would be the Phishing report button - which doesn't seem to work on Android.<p>I looked at Tutanota as an alternative, but in the end all I really wanted was something that integrates with my operating environments and just works. There are plenty of ways to communicate securely. Email doesn't have to be best one.