Proton Mail Suspended Journalist Accounts at Request of Cybersecurity Agency
Proton Mail Suspended Journalist Accounts at Request of Cybersecurity Agency

theintercept.com
Proton Mail Suspended Journalist Accounts at Request of Cybersecurity Agency

Proton Mail Suspended Journalist Accounts at Request of Cybersecurity Agency
Proton Mail Suspended Journalist Accounts at Request of Cybersecurity Agency
You need to understand a few things. In order to keep email service usable, Proton need to fight any malicious activity. If they didn't do it, ProtonMail would be quickly blacklisted by other mail providers as it will be interpreted as source of spam. At the same time, they have very limited capabilities to verify this activity by themselves as they cannot read contents of their user's emails (it is encrypted) and they keep limited logs.
As an article states, here is what happened:
While Proton does have an obligation to stop spread of SPAM mail, this incident is a bit different. Let's see -
Note that while Proton Mail (server) is E2E encrypted, but once email exits their network it no longer remains as such. So, whoever (other email provider or incident reporter) reported the incident, should have a copy of unencrypted email to prove abuse of Proton Mail service.
Given that proton now reinstated the account, that proves Proton initially froze that account based on "Trust me, Bro" proof only from krCERT.
In ideal world, any service provider should require a court order to comply with Govt request to remain unbiased in such situation.
So they simply suspend accounts because "they are evil, trust me bro" and only maybe investigate after? This is either stupid, negligent and/or bullshit.
Maybe I am misunderstanding something here, but this does seem like it could be ripe for abuse. Say I disliked a journalist and knew their proton mail. Could I report it as abuse and have them suspended?