Forwarded from BlackBox (Security) Archiv
ProtonMail: Secret adjustments to the transparency report
ProtonMail is one of the few Internet companies in Switzerland with a transparency report. The transparency that such a report can create is intended to create trust.
Thanks in part to this transparency report, it became known that real-time monitoring is also possible for ProtonMail.
The ProtonMail Transparency Report, however, has the flaw that it has been adapted considerably over the last few weeks in silence and secrecy.
According to the information in the transparency report, the last adjustment was made on 24 April 2019 (βUpdated on 24 April 2019β).
But if you compare the versions that the Internet Archive Wayback machine had saved on April 25 and July 26, 2019 (screenshot), you can see several adjustments, among others:
ππΌ Read the full (translated) report without ads n shit:
https://rwtxt.lelux.fi/blackbox/protonmail-secret-adjustments-to-the-transparency-report
#ProtonMail #Switzerland #transparency #report
π‘@cRyPtHoN_INFOSEC_DE
π‘@cRyPtHoN_INFOSEC_EN
π‘@cRyPtHoN_INFOSEC_ES
ProtonMail is one of the few Internet companies in Switzerland with a transparency report. The transparency that such a report can create is intended to create trust.
Thanks in part to this transparency report, it became known that real-time monitoring is also possible for ProtonMail.
The ProtonMail Transparency Report, however, has the flaw that it has been adapted considerably over the last few weeks in silence and secrecy.
According to the information in the transparency report, the last adjustment was made on 24 April 2019 (βUpdated on 24 April 2019β).
But if you compare the versions that the Internet Archive Wayback machine had saved on April 25 and July 26, 2019 (screenshot), you can see several adjustments, among others:
ππΌ Read the full (translated) report without ads n shit:
https://rwtxt.lelux.fi/blackbox/protonmail-secret-adjustments-to-the-transparency-report
#ProtonMail #Switzerland #transparency #report
π‘@cRyPtHoN_INFOSEC_DE
π‘@cRyPtHoN_INFOSEC_EN
π‘@cRyPtHoN_INFOSEC_ES
Forwarded from BlackBox (Security) Archiv
requests-2020-H1-en.pdf
802.6 KB
Apple Transparency Report: Government and Private Party Requests
Apple has released more iCloud content to authorities, end-to-end encryption is still missing.
User data was mainly sent to authorities in the U.S. and Brazil. In France, Sweden, Switzerland and the United Kingdom, Apple only transmitted iCloud data for one account request each, as the report lists. It remains unclear which of the partly sensitive data was transferred in detail and for what reason. In the new transparency report, Apple has confirmed for the first time that iCloud content may also be passed on in emergency requests from authorities - for example, to search for missing persons.
https://www.apple.com/legal/transparency/pdf/requests-2020-H1-en.pdf
#icloud #apple #requests #transparency #report #pdf
π‘ @nogoolag π‘ @blackbox_archiv
Apple has released more iCloud content to authorities, end-to-end encryption is still missing.
User data was mainly sent to authorities in the U.S. and Brazil. In France, Sweden, Switzerland and the United Kingdom, Apple only transmitted iCloud data for one account request each, as the report lists. It remains unclear which of the partly sensitive data was transferred in detail and for what reason. In the new transparency report, Apple has confirmed for the first time that iCloud content may also be passed on in emergency requests from authorities - for example, to search for missing persons.
https://www.apple.com/legal/transparency/pdf/requests-2020-H1-en.pdf
#icloud #apple #requests #transparency #report #pdf
π‘ @nogoolag π‘ @blackbox_archiv