Safeguard Your Gmail Privacy With Mailvelope

in #privacy8 years ago (edited)

If you’re concerned about email privacy, it’ll be worth your while to check out privacy focused email providers like StartMail, Scryptmail, ProtonMail, and Tutonota

However, if you don’t want to switch email providers, you have other options. One of my great privacy sins is that I continue to use Gmail for some things. 

Gmail isn’t the only email provider that I use, but even knowing the privacy issues of using Gmail, I haven’t fully moved away from it yet.   


If you use Gmail, Yahoo Mail, or Outlook.com for email, you’ll want to try out Mailvelope.



Mailvelope  is a browser add-in that is available for both Firefox and Chrome that  aims to make OpenPGP encryption available to webmail users. 

Even though webmail providers aren’t known to be great respecters of  privacy, you can attain a degree of privacy by using Mailvelope to send  and receive encrypted email via your browser. 

It’s built to be compatible with Gmail, Yahoo Mail, and others. I’ve tried it in Gmail, and it seems to work perfectly there. 

There also appears to be a way to make it work with other webmail providers. I tried it with a mail.com account I have, and it didn’t work out. To  be fair though, I only spent a few minutes trying to get it to work. 

Since I rarely use a browser to access that particular email account,  it didn’t seem to be worth putting a lot of time and effort into  getting the Mailvelope add-in to work with it.   


In case you’re unfamiliar with PGP for email encryption, here’s the gist: 

I’ll do my best to spare you the worst of the technobabble here, so  if you’d like a more in-depth overview, I suggest checking out  Electronic Frontier Foundation’s Introduction To Public Key Cryptography and PGP

Basically, the idea of PGP (and OpenPGP) is to enable other people to  send you a message that is scrambled by them, but can only be read by  you. 

To do this, a program generates two blocks of text that each look like a long string of random letters, numbers and symbols. 

An encryption program uses one block of text to lock a message that is being sent to you, and the other is used to unlock the message; when you receive  it. 

These blocks of text are called your public and private keys. The public key is the block that you share with the world that  enables others to send you encrypted messages. 

It is used to lock the  message, but it cannot be used to unlock them. 

The private key is the block of text that you keep secret, because  that is what is used by the encryption program to unlock your message. 

In practice, if you use Mailvelopes, it does a lot of the public and private key management heavy lifting for you.




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