Switching to the Nylas N1 Email Client
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@Dashrender said:
Clearly they have tried. The NSA got RSA to use a Random Number Generator that the NSA was behind and it was discovered a few years ago that it was rather vulnerable to decryption attack. RSA got a black eye over it, but not enough that anyone really cared.
Well... enough that a lot of people don't associated RSA with serious security. RSA is regularly mocked as are people paying their prices. RSA used to stand for security, I don't know anyone who feels that way today. That you even remember this as a non-security researcher shows just how deeply that memory goes.
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@Dashrender said:
Luckily we do have a fair amount of white hat hackers out there looking over the commonly used encryption protocols that I don't believe that they themselves have been compromised. Instead the NSA, FBI, HS, local police, etc all use viruii to infect endpoints that they want to surveil
As long as the implementations are open source. Open source is the only real protection against the government.
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@scottalanmiller said:
@Dashrender said:
Luckily we do have a fair amount of white hat hackers out there looking over the commonly used encryption protocols that I don't believe that they themselves have been compromised. Instead the NSA, FBI, HS, local police, etc all use viruii to infect endpoints that they want to surveil
As long as the implementations are open source. Open source is the only real protection against the government.
Oh, absolutely!
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@scottalanmiller said:
@Dashrender said:
Clearly they have tried. The NSA got RSA to use a Random Number Generator that the NSA was behind and it was discovered a few years ago that it was rather vulnerable to decryption attack. RSA got a black eye over it, but not enough that anyone really cared.
Well... enough that a lot of people don't associated RSA with serious security. RSA is regularly mocked as are people paying their prices. RSA used to stand for security, I don't know anyone who feels that way today. That you even remember this as a non-security researcher shows just how deeply that memory goes.
I only do because of the podcasts I listen to.
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@scottalanmiller said:
@Dashrender said:
Luckily we do have a fair amount of white hat hackers out there looking over the commonly used encryption protocols that I don't believe that they themselves have been compromised. Instead the NSA, FBI, HS, local police, etc all use viruii to infect endpoints that they want to surveil
As long as the implementations are open source. Open source is the only real protection against the government.
But then you have to trust the compiler that you are using to not insert a back door into your product... (Didn't we have a topic about this a while back?)
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@dafyre said:
@scottalanmiller said:
@Dashrender said:
Luckily we do have a fair amount of white hat hackers out there looking over the commonly used encryption protocols that I don't believe that they themselves have been compromised. Instead the NSA, FBI, HS, local police, etc all use viruii to infect endpoints that they want to surveil
As long as the implementations are open source. Open source is the only real protection against the government.
But then you have to trust the compiler that you are using to not insert a back door into your product... (Didn't we have a topic about this a while back?)
We did. And we can, thanks to... open source compilers!
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@dafyre said:
@scottalanmiller said:
@Dashrender said:
Luckily we do have a fair amount of white hat hackers out there looking over the commonly used encryption protocols that I don't believe that they themselves have been compromised. Instead the NSA, FBI, HS, local police, etc all use viruii to infect endpoints that they want to surveil
As long as the implementations are open source. Open source is the only real protection against the government.
But then you have to trust the compiler that you are using to not insert a back door into your product... (Didn't we have a topic about this a while back?)
Yeah, it was an iOS compiler in China. People were downloading a bootleg version of the compiler instead of paying Apple huge money for it.
Man, at the point Apple should have made the compiler free. They should focus on making money from selling apps in the store, not the compiler.
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@scottalanmiller said:
@dafyre said:
@scottalanmiller said:
@Dashrender said:
Luckily we do have a fair amount of white hat hackers out there looking over the commonly used encryption protocols that I don't believe that they themselves have been compromised. Instead the NSA, FBI, HS, local police, etc all use viruii to infect endpoints that they want to surveil
As long as the implementations are open source. Open source is the only real protection against the government.
But then you have to trust the compiler that you are using to not insert a back door into your product... (Didn't we have a topic about this a while back?)
We did. And we can, thanks to... open source compilers!
But you still have to compile the compiler... but the software that compiles the compiler must be first compiled by a trusted compiler.... and so on to infinity.
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Slightly un-derailing this thread -- Are you still enjoying the Email Client? lol.
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@dafyre said:
Slightly un-derailing this thread -- Are you still enjoying the Email Client? lol.
So far, so good.
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@scottalanmiller said:
@dafyre said:
Slightly un-derailing this thread -- Are you still enjoying the Email Client? lol.
So far, so good.
How does it stack up with say... Evolution?
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Haven't used Evolution in forever, but last I knew Evolution was a pain to connect to Office 365. This was as easy as signing into Office 365, which I have to do every day or so. This is great.
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No calendar yet, though. I really hope to see that soon.
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It has been a week and I am liking the Nylas N1 client more and more. I have gotten used to it and am not instinctively going to my browser any more for my email. Having one client for multiple emails is very nice, makes things easier when you have more than one account to manage.
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@scottalanmiller said:
It has been a week and I am liking the Nylas N1 client more and more. I have gotten used to it and am not instinctively going to my browser any more for my email. Having one client for multiple emails is very nice, makes things easier when you have more than one account to manage.
eh? You didn't have all of the email accounts connect into a single central account?
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Like having them all go into OWA?
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@scottalanmiller said:
Like having them all go into OWA?
exactly. I do that with my O365 account now.
For other people, they use gmail as their primary, and have gmail either get the emails, or if the other side allows it, all messages are forwarded to gmail.
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With the issues I've had with O365 email delivery, I'm glad that I didn't do that. Not that it would have been tragic as they still would not be stored there, but still a pain.
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@scottalanmiller said:
With the issues I've had with O365 email delivery, I'm glad that I didn't do that. Not that it would have been tragic as they still would not be stored there, but still a pain.
Only because of your issues - but if you didn't have issues, wouldn't have been the thing to do?