Is breaking encryption really how we protect children online?
On Oct 14, EU votes on requiring all providers to scan communications—even encrypted ones.
Who ensures surveillance stops at CSAM? Who monitors the monitors? Once broken, what stops expansion?
Backdoors for "good reasons" become control tools.
We've joined 40+ European companies demanding answers before it's too late.
Once encryption breaks, you can't unbreak it.
Read:https://soverin.com/resources/media/open-letter-to-eu-member-states-on-the-proposed-csa-regulation
Is breaking encryption really how we protect children online?
On Oct 14, EU votes on requiring all providers to scan communications—even encrypted ones.
Who ensures surveillance stops at CSAM? Who monitors the monitors? Once broken, what stops expansion?
Backdoors for "good reasons" become control tools.
We've joined 40+ European companies demanding answers before it's too late.
Once encryption breaks, you can't unbreak it.
Read:https://soverin.com/resources/media/open-letter-to-eu-member-states-on-the-proposed-csa-regulation
"The centerpiece of the Thunderbird Pro offering is Thundermail, Thunderbird’s first official email hosting service. Built to support IMAP, SMTP, and JMAP protocols from day one, Thundermail will work seamlessly with the Thunderbird client and other standards-based email apps. Notably, the initial infrastructure will be based in Germany, a jurisdiction known for its robust data protection laws under the GDPR framework and a long-standing culture of digital privacy.
Locating Thundermail’s infrastructure in Germany positions the service as a privacy-focused alternative to US-based providers, many of which are subject to surveillance regimes like the CLOUD Act. Users will be able to bring their own custom domain or choose a Thunderbird-provided address with @thundermail.com or @tb.pro suffixes.
Thunderbird describes this move as part of its broader mission to reinforce support for open standards and provide users with a cohesive, privacy-conscious email experience, entirely within its own ecosystem."
https://cyberinsider.com/thunderbird-to-launch-encrypted-email-service-hosted-in-germany/
#EU#Germany#CyberSecurity#Thunderbird#GDPR#DataProtection#Email #Encryption#Privacy#OpenStandards
"The centerpiece of the Thunderbird Pro offering is Thundermail, Thunderbird’s first official email hosting service. Built to support IMAP, SMTP, and JMAP protocols from day one, Thundermail will work seamlessly with the Thunderbird client and other standards-based email apps. Notably, the initial infrastructure will be based in Germany, a jurisdiction known for its robust data protection laws under the GDPR framework and a long-standing culture of digital privacy.
Locating Thundermail’s infrastructure in Germany positions the service as a privacy-focused alternative to US-based providers, many of which are subject to surveillance regimes like the CLOUD Act. Users will be able to bring their own custom domain or choose a Thunderbird-provided address with @thundermail.com or @tb.pro suffixes.
Thunderbird describes this move as part of its broader mission to reinforce support for open standards and provide users with a cohesive, privacy-conscious email experience, entirely within its own ecosystem."
https://cyberinsider.com/thunderbird-to-launch-encrypted-email-service-hosted-in-germany/
#EU#Germany#CyberSecurity#Thunderbird#GDPR#DataProtection#Email #Encryption#Privacy#OpenStandards