30 lines
1.4 KiB
Markdown
30 lines
1.4 KiB
Markdown
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Title: Email Security
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Date: 2016-12-24T00:24+01:00
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Author: Wxcafé
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Category:
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Slug: email-security
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So, nowadays, everyone knows emails are **not** secure. If you didn't know that,
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you should. Emails are to be treated like postcards : everyone between you and
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the person you're talking to can read them. Don't write military secrets in
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them. Back in the good old days, when the protocols they rely on were devised,
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the people creating them didn't really need to secure them (and they didn't have
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computers powerful enough to do encryption. Emails are **old**. Like, really
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old. Like older than I am. By decades.)
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There are, of course, a few methods to "secure" email. I'm ready to bet at this
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point over 75% of the people reading this are at least thinking very hard "PGP".
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Some might be thinking "S/MIME". Maybe a few of you who didn't think I was
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talking about encryption by the user are thinking about STARTTLS in SMTP, or
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SPF/DKIM/DMARC.
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If this previous paragraph confused you, at least a bit, there's a very good
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summary about these things over in the latest issue of *the IP Journal*,
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[here](http://ipj.dreamhosters.com/wp-content/uploads/issues/2016/ipj19-3.pdf)
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(pdf). I also am going to start mirroring the issues of that journal over on
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[https://wxcafe.net/pub/IPJ/](https://wxcafe.net/pub/IPJ/). I encourage you to
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subscribe to the paper version of the IP Journal, it's **free** and the content
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is generally very good and informative.
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That was all, see ya
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