I currently use the host of my website, but eventually plan to self-host and
run my own mail server.
If you're looking for an alternative to Screwgle, posteo.de seems like a good
option. It's not gratis, but if you can afford the 1 Euro/month paying with
money is better than paying with your
Google's list showing their support of open source:
https://opensource.google.com/community/affiliations/
I am disappointed with google's appropriation of free software with their
position that they should give 'something' back. The idea of Torvald's Linux
was that you give it 'all' back,
Google is the most fascinating, of the enemies of free software, to me
anyways... for one reason:
They hire people who work on coreboot, and give them some freedom, they use
free software licenses in malicious ways, and most of all, they track so many
people across the world, its hard to
Adobe, Amazon, App1e, Canonical, Fuckbook, G00g1e, m$, Netflix, Uber, are the
world’s most evil companies against software freedom ever.
I now use no services from all them but Fuckbook and G00g1e, just for legacy
communications factor. I also run Android but installs F-droid and doesn’t
https://mai.disroot.org, thanks to Disroot.org for providing free (as in
freedom), decentralized, hardened mail service. :)
Gmail is also blocked outside Hyperbola GNU/Linux-libre, for this you’d
like to consult from CalmStorm here, which he’s the most active most
generous donor for
> Apparently Google's approach to "keeping your account secure" is to track
you, and they won't allow you to use their anti-service unless your inform
them when and where you travel.
Yep, they are creepy and disgusting and their power is just too much, we have
to difund the free software
mason, would it be possible to know to which e-mail provider you switched
from Gmail?
> Reading this five pages you can run Icedove - Enigmail - Thorbirdy without a
> problem even with your disgusting gmail account.
Back when I had a disgusting Gmail account, Google would lock my account for a
few hours almost every time I accessed it using Torbirdy. Also, every time I
used
Well, all doubts have been solved finally. After taking advice from quiliro
and jxself, I have done some tests with GPG (everything works fine in command
line and no errors happen, unlike with the GUIs I mentioned, and I see no
internet connection happening whatsoever) and I asked around in
El 04/01/14 08:46, gnu...@lavabit.com escribió:
My problem is that I am trying to use it through Tor :)
And Torbirdy and Enigmail apparently don't work very well together,
also, there is the problem that since I am not using Tails, I am
afraid that by accident I might leak the keys of my
Indeed, I have been trying to search for answers in the Tor Project website.
But my questions here deal directly with something else (though I admit I got
a little sidetracked at a point).
I need to know if I can use a program to:
Import a public key file, without connecting to the web;
I need to know if I can use a program to:
Sure - It's called GPG. :)
Import a public key file, without connecting to the web
Sure - gpg --import /path/to/public/key (How that key gets on your file
system is out of scope - Maybe you got it from someone over the internet or
maybe they gave
First, thanks for your reply, it was very clear and informative. I was aware
of most of it, but some key elements were new, thanks!
However, my main 2 problems are still standing which are:
- can we be 100% sure that GPG will never connect to the internet (by an
accident or bug) thus
GPG will only be doing stuff online when you tell it to, like searching a key
server for a key or sending a key to a keyserver. There isn't much more left
to do in GPG though, so, I expect you'll know if you're doing something that
requires a network connection. :)
My problem is that I am trying to use it through Tor :)
And Torbirdy and Enigmail apparently don't work very well together, also,
there is the problem that since I am not using Tails, I am afraid that by
accident I might leak the keys of my contacts, thus revealing my real IP
behind the tor
Thanks for the comments. I am reading the handbook on the enigmail website
and it really looks like a easy thing to do IF I was to use a personal email,
instead of a Tor based one (or one that I wanted to access through Tor to
protect my identity).
After reading a little bit more on Tor
After doing some more reading it seems that Seahorse will be the tool for the
job. At least from what I have seen so far :)
One thing that bothers me is the fact that to create a new PGP key, it will
always ask for the email address... Since I don't want to connect to the
internet, and do
Guess I'm back at square one -.-
So, after lots of testing...
seahorse: is useless, for some reason the window that I get is totally
different from the ones that I saw at the tutorials online, so most actions
are not there. For some reason I can barely do anything at all with this one.
I really don't understand what your problem is. But what I did was:
- install thunderbird, thunderbird-locale-es enigmail
- OpenPGP - Configuration Wizard
And followed the steps. (Perhaps the names of the menus are not the same
in English.)
Why not use GPG on the command line to encrypt decrypt message text? Should
be easy to copy paste stuff between terminal web browser.
For PGP, try this:
https://www.enigmail.net/documentation/quickstart.php
That's how I learned to do it.
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