On Nov 1, 2007, at 10:49 AM, John Levine wrote:

Since email between hushmail accounts is generally PGPed.  (That is
the point, right?)

Hushmail is actually kind of a scam.  In its normal configuration,
it's in effect just webmail with an HTTPS connection and a long
password.  It will generate and verify PGP signatures and encryption
for mail it sends and receives, but they generate and maintain their
users' PGP keys.

There's a Java applet that's supposed to do end to end encryption, but
since it's with the same key that Hushmail knows, what's the point?


I'm sorry, but that's a slur. Hushmail is not a scam. They do a very good job of explaining what they do, what they cannot do, and against which threats they protect. You may quibble all you want with its *effectiveness* but they are not a scam. A scam is being dishonest.

You also mischaracterize the Hushmail system. The "classic" Hushmail does not generate the keys, and while it holds them, they're encrypted. The secrets Hushmail holds are as secure as the end user's operational security.

I know what you're going to say next. People pick bad passphrases, etc. Yes, you're right. That is not being a scam.

They have another system that is more web-service oriented, and they explain it on their web site far better than I could. It has further limitations in security but with increased usability. It is also not a scam.

        Jon

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