Jon Callas wrote:

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.


It certainly was not a scam when I was involved (cryptix guys did some part of the original java crypto) many years ago. The private key is encrypted by your passphrase, so the private key is not available to Hushmail.

The basic concept is of course somewhat limited by what it tries to do, but it is sound. Hushmail published the applet that did all this, and it was possible to read the code and attack it. At least one flaw was found, from deep dim memory.

There is for example a danger that hushmail could simply change the applet, and then acquire someone's key. A victim would not notice so easily because there isn't much in the browser that stops the applet from changing code. That's a threat, and they were aware of it, but it's also a bit of a high risk one, as, if it were spotted, their credibility would be shot.

In practice, the larger danger with email is that the high-profile threats to email security are on the client side. Either you, your own machine, the other guy's machine, or the other guy. I was involved in one case where super-secret stuff was shared through hushmail, and was also dual encrypted with non-hushmail-PGP for added security. In the end, the lawyers came in and scarfed up the lot with subpoenas ... all the secrets were revealed to everyone they should never have been revealed to. We don't have a crypto tool for embarrassing secrets to fade away.

iang

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