this post was submitted on 30 Mar 2024
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they could ship malicious js to their frontend that would give them access to the unencrypted session. you are going on faith every time you load the interface.
Vulnerabilities on the client end are the only way right now for most state actors to gain access to messaging. So yes, various actors are already exploiting that as they have a lot at stake to gain access. But with others already able to exploit that, why would Proton want to do that? Their model is not about advertising or selling data, and they have 100 million paying customers as I understand it. The one's that have been spying and exploiting have been the likes of Meta's Facebook with their app present on the client device, and then trying to break Snapchat's encryption this was (this came out in March 2024). Anyone "can" but we need to also consider "why" and what business model they have.
>But with others already able to exploit that, why would Proton want to do that?
to comply with a warrant