Proton is just your PGP email client + cloud sync (kind of like a password manager).
It generates a PGP key when you create an account. Then they encrypt incoming email with that key. You can replace this key if you want.
You can add PGP keys for contacts that aren't in the Proton ecosystem and they'll use those keys to encrypt out going mail and provide the information to reply using your Proton PGP key.
If your contract is another proton mail user, they set all this up automatically (they can figure that out via MX records). They've also pushed for an open standard for doing this automatically for all PGP capable MX servers (i.e. allowing the automatic key exchange to happen when emailing someone out of their ecosystem).
So what you get with Proton is a fancy PGP web client, encryption at rest server side, some niceties with automatic key exchange, and an IMAP bridge that handles all the key management outside of your mail client (which makes sure it's done right and everything is in sync across all your devices).
All the encryption and the initial key generation happens client side just like with Bitwarden.
They're all trying to reinvent email by bolting something else on top likely an in-house implementation of whatever's hot at the moment. However, the supposed benefits are completely gone once you're exchanging mails with any other email host.
But what you are suggesting only works if you only communicate with people who use gpg-aware clients, right? I've done that for years but I was mostly only able to sign my emails because nobody cares.
But of course when using a provider like Proton you can only trust them to keep just encrypted data.
No need to look for a conspiracy, this sort of thing happens all the time to all sorts of companies. Maybe it's a patent they want, maybe they want the talent, maybe they want the assets, maybe they want to remove a competitor... It's really not that unusual.
Yup, I’ve always considered my private/personal domains something akin to interfaces in programming. Send messages here, and I’ll receive them. Despite changing the email providers and services several times behind-the-scenes. The people contacting me need not worry about the details, they just want to contact me with some amount of guarantee that the address is valid, and with no need for unnecessary questions as to whether or not it might have changed. It hasn’t and it won’t, worry not.
Losing your email address can be a nightmare, as it can feel almost impossible to chase down every service you've tied to your account.
A sign-off reads, "We look forward to continuing to serve you," so it's easy to assume that the service will keep running.
You only learn about the impending shutdown after scrolling down, clicking the small "migrate your data" link at the bottom of the page, and opening the first FAQ answer.
Burying the lede under all the self-congratulatory acquisition news makes Skiff users look like a disposable afterthought.
Publicly, the company is committed to users and privacy, but those VCs needed a return on their investment.
With Skiff, there will now presumably be an email service, putting Notion pretty close to Google Workspace or Office 365.
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