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GlassSmith ago

Good post, saving this for later. Thank you, alele-opathic.

Now the only question is where the fuck do I go for a non-compromised email?

The big problem is that any email provider that has any power will be inevitably compromised either by the state or (((internal forces))), while any email provider that could stay off the radar of the (((powers that be))) would likely be small and thus easy to be pushed around by larger companies with fat wallets, squadrons of lawyers, and government support.

alele-opathic ago

Now the only question is where the fuck do I go for a non-compromised email?

Again, this is the same question that attracts astroturfing (which I'm trying to encourage people not to ask), but I've been looking into this myself, and I think the problem is twofold. Any email 'provider' provides a central point of failure, and thus a trust issue, regardless of their fancy encryption schemes. Additionally, the protocols themselves (IMAP/POP) are in no way secure at all, even if the provider is trustworthy.

I think that it may turn out to be most practical/secure/cost effective just to buy your own domain, run your own web-facing email server on a pi variant, and use PGP until someone comes out with a better protocol. This sounds like it requires a lot of effort (it's easier than it sounds), which makes it less likely people will do it - most people would rather just switch providers.

Turn_Coat ago

Where does some one who isn't quite that tech literate, and doesn't have the time, go for a non-compromised email?

Kill-Commies ago

someone once told me as a rule of thumb: the "E" in e-mail stands for evidence.