Hi Michael, Thanks for the feedback. Actually the passwords on my webmail in 2000 to 2005 were not encrypted, but I agree with you that passwords should be always encrypted.
Uri. *Uri Even-Chen* [image: photo] Phone: +972-54-3995700 Email: u...@speedy.net Website: http://www.speedysoftware.com/uri/en/ <http://www.facebook.com/urievenchen> <http://plus.google.com/+urievenchen> <http://www.linkedin.com/in/urievenchen> <http://twitter.com/urievenchen> > Speedypedia in Hebrew and English <http://www.speedysoftware.com/uri/blog/speedypedia-in-hebrew-and-english/> On Sat, Aug 15, 2015 at 6:04 PM, Michael Torrie <torr...@gmail.com> wrote: > On 08/15/2015 03:47 AM, Uri Even-Chen wrote: > > To Python, Django and Speedy Mail Software developers, > > > > Is it possible to make Speedy Mail encrypted? I want mail to be encrypted > > on the server, and only the user will be able to read his/her mail. The > > user's password will be encrypted on the server and nobody will be able > to > > read the user's mail except the user himself. Is it possible? When I had > > Speedy Mail from 2000 to 2005 I received a court order by a court in Tel > > Aviv once from two policemen to give a specific user's password to the > > Israeli police, and the password and mail were not encrypted then. And I > > was not allowed to tell anyone about this court order, except my lawyer. > > But I refused to give the user's password to the police. So if I receive > a > > court order again, I don't want to be able to give the user's password or > > mail to anyone, and I don't want it to be on the servers unless it's > > encrypted. That's why I want it to be encrypted. If I receive a court > order > > again I want to be able to tell the police that the mail and password are > > encrypted, and only the user knows the password and is able to read his > > mail. Is it possible? > > Could you encrypt your email body with gpg (say with a subprocess) and > then email that? > > As to the username and password, I've never worked on a system where > passwords could even be extracted by a sysadmin. I could tell you the > salted hash but never the password. > -- > https://mail.python.org/mailman/listinfo/python-list >
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