It's 2014. Are we there yet?
Charles Spitzer
cspitzer at godaddy.com
Fri Apr 11 17:31:45 CEST 2014
Except when your ISP is silently subpoenaed and they satisfy it without notifying you. There's no telling what the ISP has stashed away without your knowledge.
I have had my gmail email subpoenaed, but Google notified me when they received it that they would supply the requested data on a specific date unless I filed in a CA court reasons why they should not do so.
Regards,
Charlie
-----Original Message-----
From: Gnupg-users [mailto:gnupg-users-bounces at gnupg.org] On Behalf Of dan at geer.org
Sent: Thursday, April 10, 2014 7:54 PM
To: Sam Kuper
Cc: gnupg-users mailing list
Subject: Re: It's 2014. Are we there yet?
> One possible answer: https://www.mailpile.is/faq/
* Where does Mailpile store my mail?
With Mailpile, your e-mail is downloaded from the Internet
(via an email server POP3 / IMAP), and stored locally on the
computer where Mailpile is running.
* Then how do I access it when my computer is turned off?
You don't!
Exactly so.
Putting aside, for the moment, outright attacks, the individual or the enterprise that outsources its e-mail to a third party thereby creates by itself and for itself the risk of silent subpoenas delivered to their outsourcer. If, instead, the individual or the enterprise insources its e-mail then at the very least it knows when its data assets are being sought because the subpoena comes to them. Maybe insourcing your e-mail is too much work, but need I remind anyone that plaintext e-mail cannot be web-bugged, so why would anyone ever render HTML e-mail at all?
Apologies,
--dan
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