now we just need proton docs inside of the proton drive desktop client too
now we just need proton docs inside of the proton drive desktop client too
It costs money to maintain all this stuff. They’re being super generous with their free options.
Then there’s all the court cases that they fight against on the regular too. That costs a lot of money as well.
I wouldn’t know, I’ve had a paid proton account for a long time now
you mean they weren’t already?
most password managers give you the option to export your saved credentials. Pick a format that proton pass can read and then import it into proton pass.
you might’ve been able to avoid this by choosing a different folder for it to sync to on your re-install
answering the question in the title…no. Not to the service you’re using it to sign up for anyway
But someone monitoring the emails going from one address to another? Probably yes.
I started using Aegis as soon as I saw the update for the google authenticator that “securely stores” my authentication tokens…in google’s own severs…that get hacked all the time.
Don’t use proton pass to store your 2FA tokens, use something like Aegis for 2FA tokens instead, and be sure to password protect it with a password that you DON’T store inside of proton pass
I thought proton was already doing this? With the mailbox password and the “two password mode” in the settings in our accounts?
probably
There’s definitely a lot of stuff they could be doing better. And for some reason they won’t listen to their users on some of these things.
Maybe try asking for these features over on their reddit pages? People from proton are actually on those. I don’t think anyone from proton is here on lemmy
Proton family is one step above unlimited, then there’s proton visionary
possibly because there’s higher tiers such as proton family and proton visionary
I don’t know if this would be a good idea.
Sometimes it’s good to run things for a profit, that way there’s extra in case something needs to be upgraded
I haven’t heard anything.
When I did the survey, it was mentioned, but I have no idea how to access it
you may need to use your desktop/laptop to do that.
depends on the password and encryption you use on your home router. If your router is a VPN router, then your risk is significantly less, but not zero
all your traffic being intercepted by a malicious actor that hacked a wifi router
it is, but don’t use their VPN, it’s vulnerable to tunnelvision
iVPN and Mullvad are the only two I’m aware of that are immune to tunnelvision
that would be cool too.