sudneo

joined 1 year ago
[–] sudneo@lemmy.world 17 points 8 months ago (1 children)

You see, it's not required for me to agree with whom you are criticizing, to criticize your inability to be civil. So keep making as many strawmen you like. We are in a post complaining about user behavior/content and your behavior and content are both completely unacceptable in a community.

Also, you can stop name-calling, this may have an effect when someone else values your opinion, I don't.

[–] sudneo@lemmy.world 25 points 8 months ago (3 children)

I had a look at your history, and you seem really incapable of behaving in a civil way, often using insults. I don't think this is a good strategy to get your point across.

[–] sudneo@lemmy.world 27 points 8 months ago (5 children)

Be respectful of others.

This comment is in clear violation of the rules of this community. Be better, if you want to criticize others.

[–] sudneo@lemmy.world -5 points 8 months ago (2 children)

No, you’re putting a blanket over them and pretending they’re not there any more.

Isn't defederation the same thing? Users won't disappear (and they can also create accounts elsewhere...).

[–] sudneo@lemmy.world 9 points 8 months ago (1 children)

Tbh, selling data for profit is not the only thing they do. The cloud act in US exists, and government agencies can get what they want essentially when they want.

This at least applies to the big 3 cloud providers in the picture.

I guess the double standard that is the core idea behind the picture is true. On the other hand, it's also easy to see why it's considered different whether your data goes to the NSA or to the CCP, from the perspective of a US citizen.

[–] sudneo@lemmy.world 23 points 8 months ago

I went to look for the video and somehow was worse than I had imagined.

[–] sudneo@lemmy.world 1 points 8 months ago

I personally like a lot the gazillion bangs also available, the personal up/downranking/blocking of websites and their quick answer is often fairly good (I mostly use it for documentation lookup). The lenses are definitely the best feature though, especially coupled with bangs. I converted even my wife who really loves it.

[–] sudneo@lemmy.world 1 points 8 months ago

If you use GnuPG or one of the GUI implementations it does.

No, because it's the server that terminates the TLS connection, not the recipient's client. TLS is purely a security control to protect the transport between you and the server you are talking to. It doesn't have anything to do with e2ee. It's still important, of course, but not for e2ee.

You do realize e2ee merely means that two users share public keys when they communicate in order to decrypt the messages they receive, right?

And how does TLS between you and your mail server help with this? Does it give you any guarantee that the public key was not tampered when it reached your server? Or instead you use the fingerprint, generally transmitted through another medium to verify that?

Nothing to stop you from hosting your own on an encrypted drive.

An encrypted drive is useful only when the server is off against physical attacks. While the server is powered on (which is when it gets breached - not considering physical attacks) the data is still in clear.

EteSync does E2E already

And...it requires a specialized client anyway. In fact, they built a DAV bridge (https://github.com/etesync/etesync-dav). Now tell me, if you use this on -say- your phone, can you use other DAV tools without using such bridge? No, because it does something very similar to what Proton does. If proton bridge will get calendar/contacts functionality too (if, because I have no idea how popular of a FR it is), you are in the exact same situation.

[–] sudneo@lemmy.world 3 points 8 months ago (1 children)

It doesn’t matter that your private key is stored on their servers encrypted/hased or whatever. If you were simply storing it there, that would not be an issue. The problem is that you’re also logging in and relying on whatever JS is sent to you to only happen client-side.

I feel like I covered this point? They make the client tool you are using, there is 0 need for them to steal your password to decrypt your key. Of course you are trusting them, you are seeing your unencrypted email in their webpage, where they can run arbitrary code. They do have their clients opensourced, but this doesn't mean much. You are always exposed to a supply-chain risk for your client software.

Most users aren’t sending emails from their Proton to other Proton users either.

So...? The point is, if they do, encryption happen without them having to do anything, hence transparently. That was the point of my argument: my mom can make a proton account and send me an email and benefit from PGP without even knowing what PGP is.

Furthermore, the users that want encryption seek it out.

And that's the whole point of the conversation: these users are techies and a super tiny minority. This way, they made a product that allow mainstream users to have encryption.

Thunderbird or other mail clients that is open source and their apps are signed or you can reproducibily build from source.

And this control is worth zilch if they get compromised. This is a control against a MiTM who intercepts your download, it's not a control if "the maker of Thunderbird" decides to screw you over in the same way that Proton would do by serving malicious JS code. If the threat actor you are considering is a malicious software supplier, you have exactly the same issue. There can be pressures from government agencies, the vendor might decide to go bananas or might get compromised.

However, once that is built it doesn’t change. With Proton, everytime you visit their site you don’t know for sure that it hasn’t changed unless you’re monitoring the traffic.

Yes, this is true and it's the real only difference. I consider it a corner case and something that only affects the time needed to compromise your emails, not the feasibility, but it's true. I am counting on the other hand on a company who has business interests in not letting that happen and a security team to support that work.

A government is much more likely to convince Proton to send a single user a custom JS payload, than to modify the source code of Thunderbird in a way that would create an exploit that bypasses firewalls, system sandboxing, etc.

Maybe...? If government actors are in your threat model, you shouldn't use email in the first place. Metadata are unencrypted and cannot be encrypted, and there are better tools. That said, government agencies have the resources to target the supply chain for individuals and simply "encourage" software distributors to distribute patched versions of the software. This is also a much better strategy because it's likely they can just get access to the whole endpoint and maintain easy persistence (while with JS you are in the browser sandbox and potentially system sandbox), potentially allowing to compromise even other tools (say, Signal). So yeah, the likelihood might be higher with JS-based software, but the impact is smaller. Everyone has their own risk appetite and can decide what they are comfortable with, but again, if you are considering the NSA (or equivalent) as your adversaries, don't use emails.

You mean their PWA/WebView clients that can still send custom JS at anytime, or their bridge?

Yes.

First, explain what you mean by a fat client? GnuPG is not a fat client.

In computer networking, a rich client (also called heavy, fat or thick client) is a computer (a "client" in client–server network architecture) that typically provides rich functionality independent of the central server.

What I mean is this: a client that implements quite some functionality besides what the server would require to work. In this case, the client handles key management, encryption, decryption, signature verification etc. all functionalities that the server doesn't even know they exist. This is normal, because the encryption is done on top of regular email protocols, so they require a lot of logic in the client side.

Being able to export things is a lot different than being able to use Thunderbird for Calendars, or a different Contacts app on your phone.

For sure it's different, I didn't say it's the same thing. I am saying that you can migrate away easily if your needs change and you'd rather have interoperability.

DAV is as secure as the server you run it on and the certificate you use for transport.

Exactly. Which is why in the very comment you quoted I said:

There is a security benefit, and the benefit is trusting the client software more than a server, especially if shared.

Are you trusting your Nextcloud instance (yours of hosted by someone else) not getting pwned/the server being seized/accessed physically/etc. more than you trust Proton not to get pwnd? Then *Dav tools might be for you.

[–] sudneo@lemmy.world 2 points 8 months ago (2 children)

Why would anyone be interested in efforts on a platform with a closed-source backend and that is not developer focused?

Because most people don't care about those particular things. Almost all the world uses completely proprietary tools (Gmail) that also violate your privacy.

Not to mention, entirely unnecessary why you should have to use a bridge gateway in the first place with IMAPS & PGP/GPG, CalDav & CardDav. Like I said, Proton is engaged in some questionable practices.

It's not unnecessary, it's the result of a technical choice. A winning technical choice actually. PGP has a negligible user-base, while Proton has already 100 million accounts. I would be surprised if there were 10 million people actually using PGP. They sacrificed the flexibility and composability of tools (which results almost always in complexity) and made an opinionated solution that works well enough for the mainstream population, who has no interest in picking their tools and simply expects a Gmail-like experience.

And if you really have stringent requirements, they anyway provided the bridge, so that you can have that flexibility if it's really important for you.

IMAPS & PGP/GPG, CalDav & CardDav

  • IMAPs is just IMAP on TLS, so it does not have anything to do with e2ee in this context.
  • PGP/GPG is what they use. They just made a tool that is opinionated and just works, rather than one which is more flexible but also more complex. Good choice? Bad choice? It's a choice.
  • *DAV clients expect cleartext data on the server. If you encrypt the data, you need to build all this logic into the clients, and you are not following the standard anymore, which means you will anyway be bound to your client only (and those which implement compatibility). Proton decided that they want to implement e2ee calendar, and they decided to roll their own thing. It's up to everyone to decide whether e2ee is a more important feature than interoperability with other tools. I don't care about interoperability, for example, and I'd take e2ee over that.
[–] sudneo@lemmy.world 13 points 8 months ago (4 children)

Proton stores your keys

Proton stores an encrypted blob.

All they need now is your decryption password & they can read your messages

"All they need now is your private key". It's literally a secret, they use bcrypt and then encrypt it. Also, "they" are not generally in the threat model. "They" can serve you JS that simply exfiltrates your email, because the emails are displayed in their web-app, they have no need to steal your password to decrypt your key and read your email...

It isn’t transparent, because most users aren’t running their own frontend locally and tracking all the source code changes.

Probably we misunderstand what "transparent" means in this context. What I mean is that the average user will not do any PGP operation, in general. Encryption happens transparently for them, which is the whole thing about Proton: make encryption easy and default.

Now you’re merely trusting them to not send you a custom JS payload to have your decryption password sent to the server.

Again, as I said before, they control the JS, they can get the decrypted data without getting the password...? You always trust your client tooling. There is always a point where I trust someone, be it the "enigmail" maintainers, Thunderbird maintainers (it has access to messages post-decryption!), the CLI tool of choice etc.

How many users are actually utilizing their hidden API to ensure that decryption/encryption is only done client-side?

I mean, their clients are open-source and have also been audited?

If they have your private key, how many users do you think are using long enough passwords to make cracking their password more challenging?

I don't know. But here we are talking about a different risk: someone compromising Proton, getting your encrypted private key, and starting bruteforcing bcrypt-hashed-and-salted passwords. I find that risk acceptable.

This is just entirely inaccurate and you’ve failed to provide any "proof’ for your generalizations here.

See other post.

If you actually understood PGP you’d know you can generate and use local-only keys with IMAPS and have support to use any IMAP client.

Care to share any practical example/link, and how exactly this means not having a fat client that does the encryption/decryption for you?

There is no security benefit in their implementation other than to lock you into a walled garden and give you a false sense of security.

Right, because *DAV protocol are so secure. They all support e2ee, right...? There is a security benefit, and the benefit is trusting the client software more than a server, especially if shared. You can export data and migrate when you want easily, so it's really a matter of preference.

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submitted 1 year ago* (last edited 1 year ago) by sudneo@lemmy.world to c/selfhosted@lemmy.world
 

Hello everyone! During one of those illuminated evenings, I got the idea to move my small server in Scaleway to some more powerful server in Hetzner. If I will make the move, I am thinking of splitting the server in various VMs, to host different services that belongs to different trust boundaries, for example:

  • A Lemmy/writefreely instance
  • Vaultwarden/Gitea
  • Wireguard tunnel to my home infrastructure
  • Blogs, and other convenience services

In order to achieve the best level of separation, I was thinking of using VMs. My default choice would be Proxmox, because I used it in the past, and because I generally trust it, however I am trying to evaluate multiple options, and maybe someone has good or better experiences to share.

Other options I thought about are:

  • Run everything in Docker. I am going to do this nevertheless, but Docker escapes are always possible, especially with public facing images that I did not write myself and/or that require a host volume.
  • KVM directly? I am OK even without a GUI to be honest. I am not aware if there is some ansible module or even better Terraform provider for this, it would be great. (EDIT: I found https://registry.terraform.io/providers/dmacvicar/libvirt/0.7.1 which seems awesome!)
  • ESxi? I have no experience with this solution.

Any idea or recommendation?

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