Awesome…

  • Manalith@midwest.social
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    18 hours ago

    I’m not saying Proton was right or wrong to hand over data, who knows how much if a fight they really out up, but it seems more like an OpSec thing, where they found the account because they used that email to create a user account somewhere that they then posted about being a part of this group rhe FBI was going after.

    I’d say your best bet to avoid this would be to create a free account that doesn’t have any payment info and doesn’t use your premium account as a recovery method of any kind if you’re going to use it as the email associated with a social media account. Or like someone else mentioned, if there’s an anonymous payment method, always use that.

    Again, not a great look for Proton, but doesn’t really go against any of their claims as far as data encryption is concerned. Not sure if they could encrypt that payment info.

    • Voxel@feddit.uk
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      18 hours ago

      Your technical and legal understanding seems limited. I personally work in the IT space and am a hobbyist in legal matters, in particular data protection.

      I’m pretty sure there was nothing they could’ve legally done to protect the payment information.

      It’s not a “bad look” for Proton; instead, it’s just people being confronted with reality.

      If you commit a crime, law enforcement will be after you, and if your operational security sucks, there will be no service that can counter that.