Why it matters: Europe's privacy future could hinge on one country. With the October vote on the EU's Chat Control regulation looming, Germany's position may determine whether encrypted communications ...
Tuta beat America's tech giants to quantum resistant cloud storage ...
With this update, Gmail users with client-side encryption can send E2EE emails to people using other providers, like Outlook. The recipient will receive a notice about the encrypted message, and can ...
Emailing sensitive documents to clients without email encryption leaves businesses at risk of being victimized by hackers who intercept emails to steal data and commit crimes like identity theft or ...
Google has introduced a new end-to-end encryption (E2EE) feature in Gmail, enabling organizations to send encrypted emails that even Google cannot read to other Gmail users. Later this year, the ...
For a long time, I considered extra encryption for email unnecessary and a bit overkill. My argument was that if spam filters and strong passwords exist, what's the point in using a secure and ...
Protecting your email communications is more critical than ever. With growing concerns about data privacy and security breaches, many users are seeking alternatives to mainstream email services like ...
Lavabit and Silent Circle are readying a new end-to-end email encryption system, but third parties must step up In the light of a seemingly endless series of revelations about the NSA’s multifaceted ...
Google actually wants you to be more private. On Tuesday, Google announced they are creating a Chrome plug-in that will allow users to encrypt their emails in full, regardless of the recipient. In ...
Google has brought end-to-end encrypted Gmail to Android and iOS for eligible Workspace users, extending secure mobile email ...
Google expands Gmail end-to-end encryption to Android and iOS. Workspace users can now send and read secure emails directly ...
Sign up for the daily CJR newsletter. Email, that daily workflow staple, is becoming a real problem in this post-Snowden era. Or rather, it always has been an issue ...