Tag Archive for online encryption

peerio – the launch of an Online encryption productivity suite for individuals & businesses

To start off on a lighter note, we think if we were to charge a dollar everytime we featured an encrypted Online communication startup, we would definitely be laughing all the way to the bank by now. For the last year or so, we have been snowed under by requests to feature email systems that promise state-of-the-art encryption or apps bearing a similar business message.

encrypted emailNow comes along peerio, launched yesterday.

peerio claims to be different. To begin with, it is an entire productivity suite, email, chat, storage, that works around the concept of Online encryption. Other encrypted services have data encrypted only when being transmitted to their servers. After that, your messages are stored without encryption. But peerio’s end-to-end encryption has your data is encrypted every step of the way, only to be accessed by the user, & of course, the recipients. Emails cannot be encrypted by the peerio team even.

The new startup has been started by Nadim Kobeissi who has spent much of his time creating software like Cryptocat & Minilock for encrypted instant messages.

peerio is positioned as an encrypted productivity suite for individuals as well as businesses.For now, its available as a Windows & Apple Mac app as well as a Chrome plugin but Nadim has promised mobile apps too.

With a peer-based network & a secure contact verification method, you control who can message you—& who can’t. All users are given a unique cryptographically generated avatar. Confirm the identity of your contacts by having them verify their avatars with you.

Here’s what peerio does for you – don’t remember the name of your file, but you know who sent it? Want to find what your colleague said about that meeting next week? peerio’s search is designed to make answering these questions quickly. Start entering your search & peerio will neatly display relevant messages, files, & contacts in their own tabs. No browsing through long exchanges or digging through folders. Your data finds you.

Besides this clean workspace, peerio’s strict ad-free policy for all users, ensures you are not “disturbed” by Online ads.

peerio’s end-to-end encryption technology is also open sourced & peer-reviewed.

But wait, our readers may remember that late last year, we profiled an encrypted email service called Scryptmail that boasts of some of the features as peerio.

Founder Sergei Krutov had written in telling us:

Scryptmail is a brand new email service which offers to you a key benefit known as ‘Frontend Encryption’ (to get more background on this new feature, read here) In giving, the customer, the best service possible, we have followed the best PGP protocol standards for public key exchange. In addition, we have adopted open source javascript libraries to make user side encryption for email communication into a seamless process.
1 thing’s for sure – with more & more people taking Online privacy & communication more seriously. Britain’s Prime Minister David Cameron’s recent suggestion of allowing governments to pry into all encrypted services sure will find no takers.
Image Credit: peerio
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The Internet is forever. Keep your online messages private. Forever.

It may not be long before you’re using Wickr as a verb, as in, “Would you please wickr your message?” Wickr is an encryption app that lets the sender control those who can see the message, for how long & from where.

That’s right, your message will go up in smoke at a pre-set time. Of course, it’s not exactly like it happens in the movie, Mission Impossible, but the net result is the same – any picture, video & text message you send will self-destruct when the preset timer runs out.

The service & app are free to use unless you require certain premium features such as group messages or sending large files.

The privacy aspect is also zealously guarded. Your communications are virtually untrackable & secure from prying eyes since the app uses sophisticated military-grade encryption algorithms that are implemented for mobile device platforms. It works across all kinds of communications, creating a seamless mobile messaging environment that is entirely anonymous & private.

wicjrscreenshotSigning up takes less than a minute, & it’s a lot easier than signing up for an email account. Users can send secure & private text & voice messages, pictures, videos & pdf files anonymously & set the messages & files to self-destruct after a specified time elapses. You can even send files from your Dropbox or Google Drive.

They don’t ask you for any personal information, & they don’t collect any information about what you do. Their server doesn’t store any unencrypted data, & they’ll delete all the meta-data on your messages including time & date stamps, device type & geo-location data.

This deletion is not just a simple delete like you hitting the delete button. If you do that, someone who’s skilled at data recovery can still reconstruct the message or files using the meta-data. When you delete the message, wipe out the meta-data & overwrite it with random bytes, there’s no way left to bring the data back.

These guys are so confident about the security features that Wickr has offered to pay $100,000 under a bounty program to anyone who finds a bug or vulnerability that impacts the confidentiality or integrity of Wickr users’ data.

So why does Wickr offer such extreme encryption, anonymity & paranoid shredding options? Well, they certainly have the tin-foil hat market cornered. But these are not your typical latte-sipping civil rights activists or libertarians protesting big-brother intrusion. On the contrary, 3 of the 4 co-founders –  Kara Lynn Coppa, Christopher Howell & Nico Sell – are a forensics expert, a former defense contractor & a security expert, respectively.

Their motto is simple & can’t really be faulted – “The Internet is forever. Your private communications don´t need to be.”

Of course, they also have a privacy expert as one of the co-founders. That would be Wickr CTO Dr. Robert Statica, who’s the director of the New Jersey Institute of Technology’s Center for Information Protection.

On their website, the Wickr founders claim private communications to be a universal human right, & say that their app supports the First Amendment under the U.S. Constitution, & Article 12 of the United Nations Universal Declaration of Human Rights.

The Wickr app is available for both iOS & android phone users.

Click here to download Wickr on Android.

Click here to download Wickr on iOS.

Image Credit: Wickr/Google Play/Apple iTunes

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