Corwin Bell
My feedback
9 results found
-
2,088 votes
We have given this quite a bit of thought, but at the present moment, it is not clear the advantages would outweigh the disadvantages.
The biggest problem is search. Encrypting all metadata would break metadata search entirely on the web client as there is still no efficient way to handle search of encrypted data within a browser.
Secondly, metadata encryption’s value from a privacy standpoint is also somewhat dubious. Because we ultimately must deliver the message to the recipient, we must know who the recipient is. At the current time, there still isn’t any proven and viable way to work around this.
Metadata encryption is an area of continued research for us, and when the opportunity arises and the technology for doing this matures, we will definitely implement it in ProtonMail.
Corwin Bell
supported this idea
·
-
53 votes
Corwin Bell
supported this idea
·
-
23 votes
Corwin Bell
supported this idea
·
-
546 votes
Corwin Bell
supported this idea
·
-
539 votes
Corwin Bell
supported this idea
·
-
303 votes
Corwin Bell
supported this idea
·
-
105 votes
Corwin Bell
supported this idea
·
-
1,255 votes
An error occurred while saving the comment
Corwin Bell
supported this idea
·
-
911 votes
An error occurred while saving the comment
Corwin Bell
commented
I completely agree, this would be a game change for Proton Calendar to become a true alternative to Google Calendar or Outlook. Just copy how Google calendar integrates tasks. I think it's smoother than Outlook and has better integration with their other apps like Docs.
Corwin Bell
supported this idea
·
This is essential for being able to get directions to appointments to places you have never been to. Proton Calendar should just contract with a basic mapping API to make this possible. Again, just copy what Google Calendar does. I honestly think if Proton's product strategy was just copy Google Workspace and make it private you would have incredible success