![]() So where is the problem in fact that someone knows someone elses public key?Īfter comments and answer I realized that confusion goes away if you reword the highlighted sentence like this:īut since ProtonMail distributes the encryption keys to users, it has the technical ability to give Alice freshly generated malicious keys instead of Bob’s, thus encrypting the messages in a way that would allow it to decrypt them on the server (using private key from freshly generated keys) even without knowing Bob's private key. What is meant under 'its own keys'? You encrypt messages using public keys only and they are, well, public. You will get a read receipt confirming your anonymous email has been read. Its own keys in addition to Bob’s, thus encrypting the messages in a Emails to other ProtonMail users are encrypted automatically, and encryption. But since ProtonMail distributes theĮncryption keys to users, it has the technical ability to give Alice Sends Bob a message encrypted to his public key, it’s harder forĪnyone else to read the message. Key, which is stored on ProtonMail’s keyserver. ProtonMail user is being encrypted to the recipient’s correct public That it isn’t easy to know whether a message sent to another It supports Spanish, Russian, Chinese (Simplified), French, German, and English. ![]() Its translator can translate your emails from 5 languages into your system language. Now let’s address ProtonMail’s weaknesses. Other useful features of Mailspring are its built-in mail translator, read receipt, and link tracking. ![]() Currently I'm reading an article about ProtonMail here and I don't understand it.
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