If you have your own mta and use imap-s won't that do it?
Max R.D. Parmer <[email protected]> wrote:
> Ahh, OK. So secure communications between all these clients.
>
> The two big players for client-side encryption for email or messaging
> data would be GPG and OTR; for VoIP you would want to look into ZRTP.
> There are several clients that support these three protocols on all the
> platforms you've listed (though support for ZRTP is across the board
> pretty rare).
>
> Unfortunately, I'm not aware of any single cohesive guide to tie it
> altogether.
>
> --
> 0x7D964D3361142ACF
>
> On Mon, Mar 28, 2016, at 09:13, James wrote:
> > Max R.D. Parmer <maxp <at> trystero.is> writes:
> >
> >
> >
> >
> > > Do I understand correctly that you're looking to set up a Gentoo server
> > > as a "hub" from which you can retrieve your mail using any of your
> > > client systems?
> >
> > Not really. Yes that has to work but... What I want to read up on
> > and test is encrypted (secure) communications between the (2) major
> > cell phone types and whatever client on a gentoo workstation. The
> > goal is good security, that is reasonable to setup and manage
> > and allows folks to use any of those 3 devices to exchange encrypted
> > mail.
> > Suppose I had a friend that has an ios phone. What page do I send him to
> > to encrypt his emails? What will work with thunderbird, sylpheed, etc.
> > Some discussion, url links that I can refer others to and then
> > recommendations.
> >
> > > If I understood correctly, interoperability should be easy because
> > > mostly it comes down to IMAP/SMTP/POP3 and support for those protocols
> > > is pretty good across lots of applications. But maybe I got it wrong?
> >
> > What I want to do is find documents that at least provide an overview
> > of which specific apps to put on a cell phone (android or ios) some
> > example configs and then a few docs on the gentoo side.
> >
> > Free or do you buys those apps from a vendor on the cell phones?
> > Which ones are better, i.e. more trusted or have different algos
> > for encryptions (bit-lenght etc). May, I just need to find
> > a forum where this is routinely discuss to see what's new, what's
> > not secure, what may be prohibited by whom, etc etc.
> >
> >
> > OK?
> >
> > James
> >
> >
> >
> >
>
--
Your life is like a penny. You're going to lose it. The question is:
How do
you spend it?
John Covici
[email protected]