2023-02-04 13:50:37 +00:00
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---
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draft: false
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date: 2022-05-29T16:10:46+02:00
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title: Why I Switched From Proton Mail
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description: This blog post explains why I chose to switch away from Proton Mail.
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authors:
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- Sam Al-Sapti
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tags:
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- cryptography
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- decentralization
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- email
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- pgp
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series: []
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---
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2022-05-29 14:10:57 +00:00
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2023-04-23 17:37:42 +00:00
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I wanted to write this blog post (and by the way, this is my first) to shed
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some light on my recent choice of email provider. You see, Proton Mail is a
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great email service, and I've used them for years, but it just doesn't fit my
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needs anymore. This is due to a number of reasons, but it's primarily due to
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some issues with external PGP handling (I'll talk more about this later on) and
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their recent change of direction.
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2022-05-29 14:10:57 +00:00
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2022-05-29 14:21:02 +00:00
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## Centralization and Proton's new direction
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2022-05-29 14:10:57 +00:00
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2023-04-23 17:37:42 +00:00
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One of the main reasons I chose to switch, is the new direction Proton is going
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in. Recently, they've revamped all of their products and their website, to make
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it more clear that both Proton Mail, Proton VPN, Proton Calendar and Proton
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Drive is under the same family/suite (notice how there's a space now in their
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product names, that's one of the changes). All of this is great for many
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reasons, now it actually feels like an alternative all-in-one solution to
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something like Google's, and I'm sure this will benefit them in the long run
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and appeal to more people. A lot of people like these kinds of ecosystems,
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because it usually increases ease of use and convenience. In fact, this change
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now allows Proton to better integrate their products together. For example, you
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can now easily send large attachments via email, by letting Proton Mail
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automatically upload the file to Proton Drive and send a share link in the
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email, instead of attaching it in the email itself. All of the changes are
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outlined in [this article](https://proton.me/news/updated-proton) by Proton's
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CEO, Andy Yen.
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2022-05-29 14:10:57 +00:00
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2023-04-23 17:37:42 +00:00
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Personally though, this does not appeal to me. I'm not a fan of ecosystems and
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having all my eggs in one basket, and I'm a huge fan of self-hosting. You see,
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I'm a big proponent of decentralization. One aspect of decentralization is to
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not have everything in one place, when you don't control that place. For
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example, I wouldn't have both my email, calendar, contacts and cloud storage
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with Google, and neither would I with Proton. Instead, I self-host my cloud
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storage, calendar, contacts, to-do lists, and notes with the help of
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[Nextcloud](https://nextcloud.com) at home on a Raspberry Pi. This way, even
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though it's all in one place, I'm the one in control of the server hosting it
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and what happens with it.
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2022-05-29 14:10:57 +00:00
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2023-04-23 17:37:42 +00:00
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I can definitely see why Proton chose to go in this direction, and I fully
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support them. But they should also expect, and I'm sure they did, that some of
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their customers wouldn't want this change of direction. I have nothing against
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Proton as a company, but having my digital life centralized with one company is
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just not my cup of tea.
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2022-05-29 14:10:57 +00:00
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2022-05-29 14:21:02 +00:00
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## The way Proton Mail handles PGP
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2022-05-29 14:10:57 +00:00
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2023-04-23 17:37:42 +00:00
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Proton Mail offers zero-access encryption of your inbox, meaning all of your
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emails are encrypted, and only you have access to read them after unlocking
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them with your password. Behind the scenes, this works by each customer having
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a PGP key pair stored on their servers, with the private key being encrypted by
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the customer's password. This means that not even Proton themselves can read
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your emails, and this is great for privacy.
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2023-04-23 17:37:42 +00:00
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PGP has been a standard for email encryption for many years, and it's widely
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used for sensitive communication via email. Proton has taken PGP and integrated
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it into their email service, automatically providing end-to-end encrypted
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emails between Proton Mail users (it also works with other email providers, but
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it requires some setup by the communicating parties). The thing is though, that
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you're not in control of the private PGP key when using Proton Mail's PGP
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integration. Even though it is encrypted on their servers, and only I can
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decrypt it, I want to be in control of my private key myself. This also relates
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to the centralization problem I described above. By using Proton Mail, I
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2022-05-29 14:10:57 +00:00
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entrust my email security with a central entity.
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2023-04-23 17:37:42 +00:00
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This one is more on the technical side of things. I've had some not so great
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experiences when trying to use my own PGP key on top of Proton Mail's
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encryption. For example, my signatures wouldn't be recognized by the
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recipient's email client, due to the second layer of encryption that is Proton
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Mail's PGP integration. Because I want to use my own PGP key, that I'm in
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control of myself, this doesn't work for me.
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2022-05-29 14:10:57 +00:00
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2022-05-29 14:21:02 +00:00
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## Conclusion
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2022-05-29 14:10:57 +00:00
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2023-04-23 17:37:42 +00:00
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With all that said, I want to end this blog post by saying this: Don't go ahead
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and delete your Proton account solely based on what I'm saying. This is my own
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personal opinion. If you're someone who's not very technical and/or are
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satisfied with what Proton is offering, then stay. I'm not here to trash talk
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Proton and tell everyone to abandon them. I think Proton offers some great
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privacy preserving services and their line of products is perfectly suitable
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for a lot of people, and their work is important in the privacy world. I'm just
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someone who's a bit more technical than the average person, and because of
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that, Proton Mail is just not a fit for me personally. For the average person,
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Proton is fantastic, and I can only recommend them if you're wondering which
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2022-05-29 14:10:57 +00:00
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email, VPN, calendar or cloud storage provider to use.
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2023-04-23 17:37:42 +00:00
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You might be asking, what am I using now then? I'm now a happy customer over at
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[mailbox.org](https://mailbox.org), and if you're like me, you should totally
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check them out. If not, go ahead and keep your Proton account (you have one,
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right?).
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