• @[email protected]
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    3 months ago

    Swiss laws aren’t as tight as a lot of people think.

    I’d like for them to lean more heavily into open source

    • @[email protected]
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      63 months ago

      It’s probably tight enough for your needs. Unless you live in Switzerland or are breaking Swiss law, they’d need a really good reason to send your data anywhere.

      That said, I use Tuta. They have a similar source model (open client, closed server) and are based in Germany, but since they’re an underdog, they have a bit more value and lower costs. I pay €3 and get 3 custom domains and 15 aliases, whereas w/ Proton I pay $4 and get just 1 custom domain and 10 aliases; I can also add people to my plan for €3, instead of upgrading to a Duo for $15 or family for $24. If Proton matched Tuta’s features, I’d probably pay slightly more for the better UX, but I use those features so I’m very hesitant to give that up. I don’t intend to use their VPN or other products, so I’m very much not interested in their higher tiers.

      I do wish their server code was open source and self-hostable. I’d love to use my own storage, but still use their spam filtering and whatnot.

        • @[email protected]
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          13 months ago

          My understanding is that they broke Swiss law. Don’t do that if you’re hosting your evidence in Switzerland…

      • @[email protected]
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        23 months ago

        Unless you live in Switzerland or are breaking Swiss law

        That’s the thing though, governments tend to make everything illegal so they can selectively enforce.