Awesome…

  • The 8232 Project@lemmy.ml
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    1 day ago

    Proton was legally ordered by the Swiss justice department to hand over the (severely limited) information about a law breaking organization’s account. They had paid for Proton using a credit card instead of the anonymous payment methods Proton offers, and that is what Proton was forced to hand over. It was the organization’s bad OpSec, not Proton willingly deanonymizing users.

    • Lytia @lemmy.today
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      1 day ago

      Hopefully people like you will be able to nip this in the bud before yet another joke of a controversy starts…

      • NuXCOM_90Percent@lemmy.zip
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        1 day ago

        You must be new here…

        On the one hand, I really like how often Proton’s shortcomings are highlighted. This SHOULD be a wake up call that you should never rely on a company to protect you and should instead focus on what you can do to ptorect yourself. And Proton… actually are pretty good in that regard. Connect from a burner/live image computer over public wifi using tor (or something similar) and their free accounts are STILL the gold standard for journalism and whistleblowers.

        But the problem is that people are stupid and lazy (and many outlets actively benefit from "Eww, proton is bad. If only they had paid for NordVPN to really protect them from the FBI! ~Note, NordVPN provides no guarantees of protection~ ". So we just get stupidity.

        • Arthur Besse@lemmy.ml
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          19 hours ago

          Why do you think Proton stores the association between accounts and payment identity?

          Many privacy-oriented companies actually accept credit card payments and simply don’t store that information.

          answer:

          proton is snake oil

    • GreenShimada@lemmy.world
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      1 day ago

      Really, this headline should be “Organization so poorly organized that they messed up having high-security email.”

      • halcyoncmdr@piefed.social
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        1 day ago

        Not at all. Proton doesn’t require any personal info at all. But if you pay with a credit card… That has your personal info tied to it. It’s their fuck up paying with a credit card. Proton accepts other payment methods that aren’t tied to your identity.

        Proton is required by law to provide information they have when the courts say so.

          • halcyoncmdr@piefed.social
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            8 hours ago

            Not sure about Swiss laws regarding merchant payment card data retention… But they aren’t really going to matter with this situation either way. Even if Proton doesn’t keep any identifying information directly, the payment processor for sure is going to keep identifying data. Proton will have a confirmation number for the payment being processed, which can be correlated via the payment processor anyway.

        • toynbee@piefed.social
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          1 day ago

          So I’m not a criminal organization as far as I know, but if I did pay with a credit card originally can that be rectified without deleting and starting over?

          • AmbitiousProcess (they/them)@piefed.social
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            1 day ago

            Proton uses Chargebee for payments, which has its own data retention policy of essentially “as long as we want to”, but Proton does themselves keep limited data like the billing name, and last 4 digits.

            Proton’s privacy policy says nothing about a pre-set time delay after which they’d delete that data. They only claim that they “reserve our right” to remove your payment information if they think it’s no longer valid. So theoretically, that might mean if your card’s expiry date has passed, but that’s not a confirmation.

            The best way to reliably make sure Proton wouldn’t have any info on you is to not have ever tied any real information about yourself or your payment info to that account.

        • GreenShimada@lemmy.world
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          23 hours ago

          Yeah, exactly. They don’t make it hard to not tie personal data to them if you want, you just have to actually DO the thing to take advantage of it. These people seemed to think it was magic, which seems to be how a lot of people think Proton or Tuta works.