this post was submitted on 08 Oct 2025
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Privacy
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I don't know about lavabit specifically, but typically encrypted emails are encrypted on your client computer and decrypted on the recipient's computer. It is conceptually the same thing as an "end to end encrypted chat app".... just in email form.
Yes that works if both the sender and receiever encrypt the emails before sending them.
I specifically mentioned incoming plaintext (unencrypted) email.
Since mail is technically decentralised, not everyone is using protonmail for example, so protonmail can only perform e2e encryption on protonmail to protonmail email sending (they let you encrypt mail to people outside but it's not as seamless).
Nevertheless, I was mentioning incoming plaintext emails, which email providers have to encrypt before storing. The government can middleman that procedure and read the incoming mail before it's encrypted by your provider (protonmail, etc).
(This is one of the reasons why lavabit may have shutdown, you can't protect against incoming plaintext mail)
Ah.. I guess I didn't understand how services like encrypted webmail worked. I've only ever used local pgp with thunderbird or whatever. I was assuming (incorrectly) that those services operated in the same manner. Thanks for explaining it to me.
You are correct, encrypted mail providers should encrypt on-device, before sending the mail, but there isn't a solution to the unencrypted mail you could potentially recieve being intercepted.