Mailum is built for people who care about staying private by default, without having to tweak a million settings. A few key things about how we do email:
End-to-end, zero-access encryption - your messages are encrypted so that only you and your recipient can read them.
Encrypts more than just content (subjects, attachments, etc. are protected)
No phone number, no personal data required - sign up with as little info as possible
No ads, no creepy tracking - we’re not in the business of mining your inbox.
Encrypted attachments & mailbox - not just the body text, but your stored data is protected.
damn, for a sec i missread the title for being:
privacy first-encrypted email
like, its the first one cause encryption is a myth https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=E7UdtW09ghw
John is questioning the security of smartphones, but you don’t need a smartphone to use Mailum.
You you can use an open source browser on an open source Operating System.
The communication between Mailum users is end-to-end encrypted, meaning that data gets encrypted in your browser and decrypted in your recipient’s browser. Unencrypted data is never sent to our servers. We have access to the encrypted data which we cannot read.
and my bad on that, i meant since is like only from a user of the service to an other user of the same service
like, in my case i guess the free plan would be alright since i dont really send emails anyways but for mail verification when registering and whatnot
but then, those mails wouldnt be encrypted i believe, since they’re sending from their own mail instead of from the same provider
so would still have to delete those manually after receiving them
and you would still receive them unencrypted i believe, like, if not deleting them manually they would stay stored unencrypted on those servers i think (well, they would on their side at least, idk if on your side too but maybe?)
idk, mails are such a headache lol
but yea, i do appreciate the options
and the free plan seems fair, since most usecases is literally just to receive anyways (and you still allow to send too, just with an hourly limit on the free plan, which is totaly fair imo)