I am confused by this logic. Proton has never stated they wouldn’t comply with the law. Just that if you encrypt items in your account that they couldn’t not decrypt them.
If you want to work with a company that will ignore the law then you will have to work with an illegal entity.
"Since the Proton Meet servers do not have the meeting password and thus cannot derive the MLS keys, Proton cannot decrypt and record any of the audio, video, screen share, or chat messages." per https://proton.me/blog/meet-security-model
So if they then somehow turn around and decrypt this data, that would be against their statements. It's not against the law to say "We don't have any way to decrypt this data due to the nature of E2E encryption". (Not a lawyer...maybe it is idk)
I found some more technical information here: https://proton.me/blog/meet-security-model
"Confidential" until the feds decide that your meeting is a threat to a wanna be dictator, then everyone is invited to the party.
I am confused by this logic. Proton has never stated they wouldn’t comply with the law. Just that if you encrypt items in your account that they couldn’t not decrypt them.
If you want to work with a company that will ignore the law then you will have to work with an illegal entity.
Well...no, they clearly state:
"Since the Proton Meet servers do not have the meeting password and thus cannot derive the MLS keys, Proton cannot decrypt and record any of the audio, video, screen share, or chat messages." per https://proton.me/blog/meet-security-model
So if they then somehow turn around and decrypt this data, that would be against their statements. It's not against the law to say "We don't have any way to decrypt this data due to the nature of E2E encryption". (Not a lawyer...maybe it is idk)