- cross-posted to:
- protonprivacy@lemmy.world
- cross-posted to:
- protonprivacy@lemmy.world
cross-posted from: https://feddit.uk/post/24065032
I’ve seen this posted a couple of times in comments, it seems like a reasonable investigation in to the recent shit storm
I usually actively avoid engaging in anything to do with US politics as it’s pointless getting depressed by an awful situation I have zero control over; this post is not about fueling arguments or making us all feel worse, just determining if a useful tech company has gone to shit (TL;DR: probably not).
There are multiple issues with this blog post.
Paints entire issue as “politics”
The post falsely assumes Andy Yen’s politics exclusively matter - they don’t. Andy Yen stupidly posted a opinion online, then stupidly got the official corporate Proton account to stupidly repeat it on multiple platforms.
This is the issue: they demonstrated massive corporate mismanagement.
Then the company tried sweeping it under the rug, and many users are unaware about the corporate statements.
The article never addresses that issue. The author probably wishes Andy Yen’s mistake was just political, because that would be easy to write off. But it’s not.
Trust matters
If the CEO is able to bungle something this badly in full public sight, I lose a tremendous amount of trust in the actual product. And because Proton gets a good chance to read over every single email that comes in from an external source - password reset emails, confidential documents, etc - now I’m worried that they could bungle something that I can’t see… Until it’s too late.
Article misrepresents Slater
If you read this Medium article alone, you might come away with the impression Gail Slater is a champion of small business. After all, it says
I was caught by surprise too: this article misses key details about Gail Slater. Several people pointed this out to Andy Yen.
That lobbying group that employed her for four years was the Internet Association.
Maybe Andy Yen stupidly didn’t know better when he made his post (as “Proton Team”) when he claimed she had “a solid track record of being on the right side of the antitrust issue”.
But this article should have known.
Technical issues
This article also makes a poor technical assumption: if you read it without knowing better, you’d think Proton isn’t capable of scanning and recording the text of mail as it arrives.
Lines like these
tell the reader, either ignorantly or intentionally, the opposite of most email works. Banks, service providers, and password reset emails are all likely to be readable on receipt. E2EE emails in Proton are literally exceptionally rare.
Assorted notes
Agree, the remarks about race and gender made me do a double take. Like, buddy, you got it all wrong.
To me, the article almost reads like it was written by a conservative trying to parody liberal ideology. After starting the article from the beginning, I got the distinct impression that the author was saying “hello, fellow liberals” to the audience.
Especially after seeing significant gaps in information about both Andy Yen’s actions from this author, despite the claims that
It doesn’t help that the author is anonymous and has no other articles to their name.