Greetings Robert,

O-365 (Microsoft) is making moves in US government secure markets (DHS, DoD particularly). Perhaps that is the interest and driving direction, generally.

Either way, if I receive unsolicited encrypted email without advance agreement to do so, I consider it to be junk and have not intention to respond.

If an agreement to receive encrypted email is requested, I would have to consider whether to agree to accept a decoding method.

SFAIK, there is no current problem in my daily use of email for any client (app) or recipient in that regard.

Respectfully,

Henry Seiden
- -
Techworks Pro Co.
E: info<at>techworkspro<dot>com
W: http://techworkspro.com

On 26 Oct 2022, at 4:02, Robert M. Münch wrote:

Hi, I just received an encrypted email from an Office 365 user (attached as *message_v3.rpmsg file).

1. What kind of encryption does Office 365/Outlook use?

2. Is that something external mail clients can support?

3. @Benny: Is support planned?

I mean, many companies are using this office stuff, and I would go mad, if I now receive hundreds of emails, where I have to click a link to access them.

This smells a bit like an intended MS strategy to push more and more people into their ecosystem by making things not working together, while activating encryption by default for all customers.

Viele Grüsse.

--

Robert M. Münch


Note: The .ASC file contains a digital PGP signature of this email. It can be used to check that this email is from me and was not changed since I wrote it.

Hinweis: Die .ASC Datei enthält eine digitale PGP Signatur dieser Email. Mit dieser kann überprüft werden, dass diese Email von mir geschrieben und seitdem nicht verändert wurde.
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