this post was submitted on 03 Nov 2025
        
      
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Proton are very open about what they do and don't provide.
They're not going to protect you and they will turn on you the second they get a letter in the mail or a text from the cops.
But what they DO provide is the ability to register an email address (with a domain that isn't blocked by most services) without providing any other information. And, from there, you can encrypt it yourself if it is a particularly sensitive message.
As for IP logging? if only there were tools like VPNs and Tor to negate that.
IMO if proton can change their stance and their policies (like their website no longer says emails are anonymous), then I don't think they are a good private service provider. The only thing going for proton now is that their emails are encrypted and can't be read by them.
Who knows if a request came from a specific channel of the government that deals with crime, may be they will decrypt the content for them?
No.
The "only thing going for" them is the ability to sign up with zero personal information. You can encrypt your emails with ANY service because it is you exchanging keys ahead of time and doing it locally before you even look up Job on usenet.
Do not trust a third party to encrypt your sensitive communications for you. Do not trust a third party to protect you. Instead, look at what the the third party actually offers you and figure out how you can take advantage of that.
This is the kind of person that isn't worried about incognito market black mailing them.
In most cases, they fight tooth and nail and use their own lawyers if necessary
Did they in this case?