• regalia
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    71 year ago

    You’re paying to reserve some space in their cloud to store your encrypted bits. If you exchange money for that space, then you’re entitled for it to be encrypted and private.

    • phillaholic
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      21 year ago

      Find me any place you don’t own that you can store your stuff that has no restrictions on what you can store there.

      • regalia
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        41 year ago

        Something like Proton Cloud, or a self hosted Nextcloud instance. If it’s encrypted, it’s nobody’s business.

        • phillaholic
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          41 year ago

          Not according to their terms of service

          You agree not to use your Account or the Services for any illegal or prohibited activities. Unauthorized activities include, but are not limited to: Disrupting the Company’s networks and Servers in your use of the Services; Accessing/sharing/downloading/uploading illegal content, including but not limited to Child Sexual Abuse Material (CSAM) or content related to CSAM;

          • regalia
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            61 year ago

            It’s e2ee, that’s just for them to legally cover their ass. They have zero knowledge of what’s uploaded.

            • phillaholic
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              31 year ago

              Proton hasn’t really gotten pushback yet as they are small. If Pedophiles start utilizing Proton for CSAM I guarantee you things will change or they will shut down. Another full e2e provider, can’t recall the name at the moment, just ended up shutting their service down when governments started coming after them. They aren’t the guys from the PirateBay.

              • regalia
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                21 year ago

                That’s an attack on e2ee, not on any specific provider. CSAM is just one of the ways they use to criminalize encryption.

                • phillaholic
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                  21 year ago

                  It’s also a real world problem, and positioning yourself as a safe haven for it isn’t going to work. Apple was trying to let you have E2E while simultaneously destroying many Governments main objection to it. Now we are back to square one, and if providers refuse to work with governments, governments will attack E2E encryption.

                  • regalia
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                    21 year ago

                    I wouldn’t say it’s square one, it currently exists and is usable right now at least. So the laws haven’t won yet. It definitely can be more prevalent though.