On 2018-02-12 21:00, Philip Jackson wrote:
> Sorry, I didn't make myself really clear.
> My concern was that I got the impression that the dummy message would
> always be equal to "Encrypted message" rather than to a random but
> sensible short message.
Is there a difference? The body is still eas
On 12/02/18 20:38, Sebastian wrote:
> On 2018-02-12 20:03, Philip Jackson wrote:
>> If this is so, it will be very easy for any isp to have their
>> attention drawn to an encrypted message. Did I misread this info
>> ?
> Every entity which can read the subject can also read the
> (encrypted) mes
On 2018-02-12 20:03, Philip Jackson wrote:
> If this is so, it will be very easy for any isp to have their attention
> drawn to an encrypted message. Did I misread this info ?
Every entity which can read the subject can also read the (encrypted)
message body. So if the body is encrypted, the (unenc
On 12/02/18 13:14, Patrick Brunschwig wrote:
> * The message subject can now be encrypted and replaced with a dummy
> subject, following the "Memory Hole" standard for protected Email
> Headers [5].
After installing 2.0 Beta1, an info box opened in which I think I read
(because I can't find that i
On 2/12/2018 8:11 AM, Patrick Brunschwig wrote:
> On 12.02.18 13:52, David wrote:
>> On 2/12/2018 7:14 AM, Patrick Brunschwig wrote:
>>> I'm pleased to announce the 1st beta version of Enigmail 2.0. This marks
>>> a major milestone in the development of Enigmail. In the two years since
>>> the last
On 12.02.18 13:52, David wrote:
> On 2/12/2018 7:14 AM, Patrick Brunschwig wrote:
>> I'm pleased to announce the 1st beta version of Enigmail 2.0. This marks
>> a major milestone in the development of Enigmail. In the two years since
>> the last major update, we improved and changed quite many thin
On 2/12/2018 7:14 AM, Patrick Brunschwig wrote:
> I'm pleased to announce the 1st beta version of Enigmail 2.0. This marks
> a major milestone in the development of Enigmail. In the two years since
> the last major update, we improved and changed quite many things. The
> code base grew by more than