I have degoogled myself when it comes to email, running self-hosted email & calendar (not my own server). Did it two years ago, and up to now it has worked very well. I don’t miss anything from Gmail and have all the features it offered, plus some extra ones (like deleting email attachments via an email client – Gmail never deleted them, just archived them).

It’s good, however, always to have a backup email address that’s not connected with your hosting service. Up to now I’ve been using Gmail for that, but in view of recent developments, I just want to ditch the whole Google business.

I’ve seen that many people use Protonmail for this, and that’s what I’m considering. I’d like to hear about more possibilities and experiences though. Maybe there’s another provider that’s friendlier or more consumer/internet-freedom oriented?

  • @jetA
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    411 months ago

    Yeah, 100%. It’s only reasonable if you want their full encrypted at rest design model. Every other service, including proton, keeps the metadata unencrypted: to,from,subject. This is done to make searching more manageable, but metadata is the prize.

    Having used the tutanots app for a few years, it’s grown on me.

    • @CrypticCoffee@lemmy.mlM
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      311 months ago

      Email is a pretty insecure protocol as it is. From what I am aware, you can only get a certain level of security/privacy when sending cross domain emails, so we cannot get the same level of privacy as we would with Matrix or Signal. It’s getting the best security you can with a medium we and the world are unfortunately dependent on.

      • @jetA
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        211 months ago

        Agreed. We are talking only about the security of the email archive.

      • stravanasuOP
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        111 months ago

        Partly off-topic: is that true even when one uses PGP? Email security and encryption is something I know very little about, unfortunately.