I’m using Skiff Mail with two custom domains.
I’m using Skiff Mail with two custom domains.
I don’t trust them. Too many red flags.
UI has in fact improved but I still find some apps (specially for iOS) somewhat tacky.
Being launched by CERN scientists shouldn’t be a deciding factor.
But yes, Proton is as safe as it gets.
Tutanota also has calendar. But I understand your point.
Tutanota has e-mail and calendar. They are currently working on cloud storage.
Proton Drive client for macOS is on beta right now.
We’re also beginning the beta for our upcoming macOS desktop app for Proton Drive. As with the other Proton betas, we’re starting with Proton Lifetime accounts today, with Visionary users to be invited later. While community feedback is always important, it’s especially vital at these early stages, so we will send beta invites via email based on our ability to keep up with the feedback. We’ll collect feedback both on Reddit and at [email protected]. Once the macOS app is released, we’ll also work on our planned Linux version.
Vaultwarden allows all Premium features at no additional cost.
As safe as it can be. No more, no less. One of the best out there.
The best advice you will ever receive is to not use a company’s provided phone on personal affairs.
2FAS on my iPhone with the browser extension on my MacBook.
When I need to enter the code on my laptop, I just click the icon extension, which pings my phone, I accept the request and it auto-fills.
I use a generic custom domain. Like @tangomail.com. I’ve enabled catch-all on that domain and create aliases on the fly.
Prior to that I’ve used Simple Login, AnonAddy and DuckDuckGo E-mail Protection. I’ve used DDG the longest, and the only thing I miss was a dashboard.
Phones. Not iPhones. Phones.
Tresorit is the gold standard. Quite hard shoes to fill.
Bitwarden. Tried Proton Pass but ultimately stuck with Bitwarden.
It has been my password manager of choice for quite some time and I didn’t see any reason to change.