Summary

Proton Mail, known for its privacy-first email services, faced backlash after CEO Andy Yen praised the Republican Party and its antitrust stance.

The company initially posted and deleted a statement supporting Yen’s comments, later claiming an “internal miscommunication” and reiterating its political neutrality.

Critics question Proton’s impartiality, particularly as it cooperates with Swiss authorities on legal data requests.

Privacy advocates warn that political alignments could undermine trust, especially for Proton’s users—journalists and activists wary of government surveillance under administrations like Trump’s.

  • Dharma Curious (he/him)
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    312 days ago

    Okay, can someone help me, a tech illiterate, choose a new vpn, email provider, and password manager? I’d really prefer open source.

      • @[email protected]
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        392 days ago

        DEFINITELY do not go 1password. They took a massive VC investment and it is only a matter of time before they find a way to monetize it. Ignoring the fact they absolutely destroyed the app.

        Bitwarden (you can host yourself with vaultwarden) or KeepassXC.

        • @[email protected]
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          52 days ago

          They took a massive VC investment and it is only a matter of time before they find a way to monetize it.

          Can you explain this? I’ve been using the app for over 10 years and it’s only gotten better. I haven’t seen any evidence yet that it would suddenly change

          • @[email protected]
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            122 days ago

            Yes, in 2021 they took a $100M investment for a password manager. There’s no planet on which they can justify that valuation without doing things to significantly increase their revenue. https://techcrunch.com/2021/07/27/1password-raises-100m-at-a-2b-valuation/

            If you’ve used the product for 10 years like you claim, then you should know very well the many ways in which they’ve gotten worse. A couple obvious ones off the top of my head because I dropped them like a bad habit after I saw that VC “investment”:

            1. they killed off any ability to purchase a permanent license key and forced people into subscriptions.
            2. the app has only improved? How are those nested tags working for you? A feature they had 10 years ago that they broke and never brought back.
            3. Performance on windows has continually gotten worse with every release for the last 8 years.
            • @[email protected]
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              2 days ago
              1. they killed off any ability to purchase a permanent license key and forced people into subscriptions.

              For I think $75 I used an excellent password manager for literally like 7 years on multiple platforms. As a software engineer I know that wasn’t a small effort to make that happen. I think I got my money’s worth… and out of every digital service I pay for, I find password management most critical and worth paying for

              1. the app has only improved? How are those nested tags working for you? A feature they had 10 years ago that they broke and never brought back.

              Yes it certainly has gotten better on every platform. I don’t know anything about nested tags. I don’t even use non nested tags. But sure the whole company sucks because they removed a feature you liked. Features that get less use get removed, that’s how products work…How has it improved? Well, it’s weird you ask it all aggro like that but yeah, the search, UI, watchtower, browser extensions, ease of adding a new device, cli tool, and many tiny details have improved over the years.

              1. Performance on windows has continually gotten worse with every release for the last 8 years.

              Funny you say that, the app went from barely usable on windows (which I rarely use) to almost as good as Mac. Then right when I switched to Linux they released a very good client on that platform, which was something I didn’t even expect.

              I am not quite sure what the motivation is implying I’m lying about how long I’ve used software or my experience with it, but I’m not. Be mad I guess.

            • @[email protected]
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              42 days ago

              It might get worse eventually but I disagree with your condescending assertions that it already is. Later.

        • @[email protected]
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          192 days ago

          They asked as a “tech illiterate” so I answered what I’d answer a tech illiterate person.

          Keepass is good, but it’s not tech illiterate friendly.

        • @[email protected]
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          82 days ago

          From a UX perspective I disagree. 1password wins at UX hands down but Bitwarden is a very close second and IMO has better privacy guarantees.

          Security is useless if it’s too difficult. Despite liking Bitwarden I am a 1Password subscriber and happy with my choice.

          • @[email protected]
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            32 days ago

            Really? I really dislike the UI of one password. I have to use it for work and it’s a pain.

            Never tried bit Warden could be good who knows not me that’s for sure.

            I don’t think keepass is to difficult as to make it useless. I think it really depends on the platform there are some amazing Android apps that will autofill directly from your keyboard no real work necessary it recognizes everything. Now if you’re on Windows… Yeah things start to fall off the wagon

    • @[email protected]
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      2 days ago

      VPN: Mullvad

      Password manager: Bitwarden
      (or if you are advanced user, KeePassXC + Syncthing for full control of your DB)

      Email: I use Tuta, but I am honestly not that confident in it to recommend it, unlike the above.

      • @Hawk
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        22 days ago

        Airvpn has port forward i believe.

        • @[email protected]
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          2 days ago

          I guess if you really really need port forwarding, you need to look at dodgy choices like that.

          But unless you absolutely need port forwarding, stick to Mullvad. If it is only about torrents, consider getting a seedbox instead of or in addition to VPN.

          • @Hawk
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            12 days ago

            I’ve had a good experience with AirVPN. I mean, I only use it for torrenting, but… Is there a good reason not to go with them for torrents?

            • @[email protected]
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              2 days ago

              I don’t think there is particular problem with torrents. The problem is, when your VPN is active, you probably send all your other data through it. That is why dodgy seedbox is much less of an issue compared to dodgy VPN. A seedbox only has access to your torrents, a VPN probably has access to all of your communications.

              While AirVPN claims no logging, with prices that cheap and already having to skirt the law to be able to provide port forwarding, it’s not very credible. There is a good chance your data is being sold to someone and/or getting stolen since good security costs money.

              Now there is no guarantee AirVPN has these issues or that Mullvad doesn’t, but Mullvad goes to great lengths to build their trustworthines, e.g. 3d-party audits, not even having disks in their servers to ensure logs can’t be stored, etc.

              • @Hawk
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                22 days ago

                Oh, okay, I understand what you’re saying now.

                Yeah, I don’t trust any of the VPN providers. There’s just no evidence that they’re trustworthy. I reach for Tor (or i2p sometimes).

                I typically run all the torrenting stuff in a container, I’ve never actually used that VPN to browse. I just spin the container up and down when I want my bandwidth back.

                • @[email protected]
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                  2 days ago

                  Nice. Good to see you know what you are doing. I see no issue with this setup.

                  That said, most people will use VPNs for their whole system. So when you nominate AirVPN without additional context, that is what most people would use it for. Please take care in making clear what you recommend it for going forward :)

    • @[email protected]
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      82 days ago

      You might want to have a look at this site to study-up on available/recommended tools: https://www.privacyguides.org/en/ I use Mullvad VPN myself and am happy w/it. Ditto Bitwarden which works well and is cheap. I have a Tuta account but detest the UI and the fact that they don’t support IMAP/SMTP clients, or PGP, so I do my own PGP encryption/decryption using Thunderbird Mail on desktop which has built-in support for it. Also I use Fastmail as a (paid) provider (no built in PGP but tons of other bells & whistles) though mailbox.org looks interesting and is well-priced. Finally I use addy.io for anonymous aliases/forwarding and they have good PGP support.

      • @Hawk
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        12 days ago

        Keepass with rsync / unison or a local git server works pretty well too.