GPG has a chicken and egg problem. I have mine publicized on Ubuntu’s key server, which is likely one of the bigger ones (but iirc it is of little relevance as it syncs with other keyservers). Out of the emails I am sent only one of my contacts bothers with encryption. Which is sad, but what can you do? The web mail interfaces rarely if ever support GPG, and even if they do sharing your key with them defeats the purpose.
Obligatory video from one of the greatest channels youtube has ever seen: By Default - There is no private email
Here is an alternative Piped link(s):
https://piped.video/iH626CXyNtE
Piped is a privacy-respecting open-source alternative frontend to YouTube.
I’m open-source; check me out at GitHub.
Has really everyone fogotten that you can use tools like GPG? What fucked up timeline is this?
GPG has a chicken and egg problem. I have mine publicized on Ubuntu’s key server, which is likely one of the bigger ones (but iirc it is of little relevance as it syncs with other keyservers). Out of the emails I am sent only one of my contacts bothers with encryption. Which is sad, but what can you do? The web mail interfaces rarely if ever support GPG, and even if they do sharing your key with them defeats the purpose.
What do you do? Choose providers that allow using a standard mail client.
Honest question: how many email-havers do you think know what GPG is?
If they don’t know what GPG is then why are they using Proton?
…what? How is that related at all?
Gretty Pood Grivacy
GNU Privacy Guard
Technically, Proton uses PGP under the hood to send emails between Proton accounts. You really don’t need to know that to use the service though.