If you rely on Proton's services, this makes for rather worrying reading.
https://theintercept.com/2025/09/12/proton-mail-journalist-accounts-suspended/
Post
If you rely on Proton's services, this makes for rather worrying reading.
https://theintercept.com/2025/09/12/proton-mail-journalist-accounts-suspended/
But then I drifted back. Don’t remember exactly why. I use the password manager and online storage a lot.
May be time to drift away again, at least for the email side. #Proton
People's projection and spin are wild, man
Still wanna find some alternatives, esp related to working around/with the factor of US jurisdiction
@heiseonline Gibt es dazu auch etwas von eurer Seite?
https://theintercept.com/2025/09/12/proton-mail-journalist-accounts-suspended/
"Proton did not publicly specify which CERT had alerted them, and didn’t answer The Intercept’s request for the name of the specific CERT which had sent the alert. KrCERT also did not reply to The Intercept’s question about whether they were the CERT that had sent the alert to Proton."
To me it looks like KrCERT told Proton that "hackers" (the security researchers doing proper security disclosures) were using these email accounts - and Proton decided that it's enough that a CERT tells them an account is violating their ToS to be suspended.
That's clearly an extremely dangerous position to take.
Yes and No, If you followed their CEO controversy earlier this year.
Still I suspect this specific instance was a cockup rather than a conspiracy.
It's still not a good look for a business that claims the privacy high ground 🫤🤦♂️
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