proton-bridge
0x4447_product_s3_email
Our great sponsors
proton-bridge | 0x4447_product_s3_email | |
---|---|---|
83 | 15 | |
1,062 | 3,010 | |
3.9% | 0.4% | |
9.7 | 2.6 | |
about 2 months ago | 4 months ago | |
Go | ||
GNU General Public License v3.0 only | MIT License |
Stars - the number of stars that a project has on GitHub. Growth - month over month growth in stars.
Activity is a relative number indicating how actively a project is being developed. Recent commits have higher weight than older ones.
For example, an activity of 9.0 indicates that a project is amongst the top 10% of the most actively developed projects that we are tracking.
proton-bridge
-
ProtonMail Complied with 5,957 Data Requests in 2022 – Still Secure and Private?
That isn't really fair. If you read the article, protonmail essentially supplied the FBI the recovery email of the account. This is metadata that protonmail must have that isn't encrypted by the user for obvious reasons.
Regarding the "MITM" for every email sent, this is related to their "bridge" software which allows regular IMAP/SMTP software to use Proton Mail. This software must edit the emails to encrypt them in their scheme.
This software is open source and can be inspected and/or built locally. https://github.com/ProtonMail/proton-bridge
-
ProtonMail Rewrites Your Emails
> This appears to be related to a behaviour that ProtonMail has of dropping all plaintext email if any mime-encoded parts exist.
https://github.com/ProtonMail/proton-bridge/issues/26#issuec...
I'm actually more shocked knowing that they drop plain text if there is a mime-encoded part (e.g. HTML). Just verified that all mails imported from GMail and all newer mails I received in PM only have the HTML part now, while GMail shows both HTML and plain text parts in message source. Great, now if I want to use a text-only client to read those mails in the future, I won't be able to.
Now I honestly wonder, how did they think this is something okay to mess up? Is there just no usable email hosting service for someone that want their mails not touched and also stored securely? Like, this is not even going to save storage space for PM - I'm paying for my storage.
- Proton Mail (Bridge) for High Sierra Mac
-
Bridge V3 Cache
Repository here https://github.com/ProtonMail/proton-bridge
- People over-emphasize the slow pace of update rollout, and under-emphasize that once the updates roll out they rarely break or malfunction
- Moving emails from Proton Mail.
-
FYI, Protonmail Bridge tries to silently install a sketchy CA cert in your OS cert store
The privkey is never loaded out of the keychain. Rather, it acquires a handle to the privkey and relies on the keychain to carry out cryptographical operations. (https://github.com/ProtonMail/proton-bridge/blob/master/pkg/keychain/helper_darwin.go and https://github.com/ProtonMail/proton-bridge/blob/master/pkg/keychain/keychain_darwin.go)
- How's the linux bridge coming along; and also, how do I stay on the main website?!
-
Mails missing in MacOS Mail
Oh yes. The Bridge shouldn’t have been marketed as stable for the past years because of this issue (see issue #220 on Github, reported 2021-09-29). It’s fixed in Bridge 3.0.
0x4447_product_s3_email
-
Free VPS as SMTP Proxy
Here is something on GitHub that roughly follows this paradigm, and was made to use SES as the "email server".
-
Need any open-source alternatives?
- https://github.com/0x4447/0x4447_product_s3_email
-
Self-hosted email is the hardest it's ever been, but also the easiest
> Could there be a serverless alternative where the service wakes up only to receive emails and will be charged only when emails are processed, filtered and served & rest of the time no charge - avoiding $3 to $5 charged by behemoths per inbox?
I love ideas as much as the next guy and serverless email is kind of floating out there:
https://medium.com/schibsted-engineering/building-a-serverle...
https://github.com/arithmetric/aws-lambda-ses-forwarder
https://github.com/0x4447/0x4447_product_s3_email
It's possible to build it, but the problem is that you still have the same problem of deliverability. Obviously it works fine/great for receving emails though.
> Idea is how cheap can it go for personal inbox with all the features denied by the superlative pricing plans
It could get really cheap, but would people buy it? I always wonder if price is really the limiting factor for self hosted emails.
Zoho is already QUITE cheap: https://www.zoho.com/mail/zohomail-pricing.html
Maybe this would work as a business, but it's a bit questionable to me.
- Lambda email system
-
Get email attachments directly into S3 bucket?
Based on your description I think this project is for you: https://github.com/0x4447/0x4447_product_s3_email - it dose what you are looking for, I hope this helps.
-
Need Help | Create serverless 'Email Service'
Here is a complete solution that hopefully gives you some ideas for a more simplified approach based on your needs. https://github.com/0x4447/0x4447_product_s3_email
-
Please fix the AWS free tier before somebody gets hurt
> What do you think about this page: https://aws.amazon.com/getting-started/
It is very dangerous. If you select the full-stack tutorial you get: "Time to Complete 30 minutes". It should say: "30 min to ruin your life" ;)
If you want to really learn AWS, then this page should be used as a reference of how to design a stack. If I were you I would read the tutorials to see which services are needed for a solution, but before doing anything, I would read the docs for each of those services to really understand them, then I would go back to the tutorial and actually do it, and - MOST IMPORTANTLY - I would read the pricing page for each service that you are going to use.
> Do you think it's irresponsible for AWS to encourage beginners to try their service when they apparently only intend it to be used by those with a computer science degree and 5-year apprenticeship under an experienced sysadmin?
100% - when I started working with AWS in 2016 I had a very hard time figuring it out, because I was looking for the simplicity the the marketing team was writing about. I really don't like what the marketing team tries to tell you, because it dose not exist.
Regarding an approach to learn about AWS, I would start with all the serverless services that they have, since the pricing for most of them is ideal for beginners (WARNING - read the pricing page for each since not all have a free staring plane, like S3 and DynamoDB) and for simple weekend projects.
For example, I did build this project a while ago: https://github.com/0x4447/0x4447_product_s3_email, if you scroll down to the pricing section you will see this:
```
- A serverless email server on AWS using S3 and SES
What are some alternatives?
hydroxide - A third-party, open-source ProtonMail CardDAV, IMAP and SMTP bridge
aws-nuke - Nuke a whole AWS account and delete all its resources.
FreeCAD_assembly3 - Experimental attempt for the next generation assembly workbench for FreeCAD
former2 - Generate CloudFormation / Terraform / Troposphere templates from your existing AWS resources.
Contents - Community documentation, code, links to third-party resources, ... See the issues and pull requests for pending content. Contributions are welcome !
mCaptcha - A no-nonsense CAPTCHA system with seamless UX | Backend component
proton-bridge - ProtonMail Bridge application
amail - AWS-hosted personal email system: sending, receiving, storage, and forwarding (relaying). `notmuch` client. JMAP server WIP.
aws-lambda-ses-forwarder - Serverless email forwarding using AWS Lambda and SES
MoonMail - Email marketing platform for bulk emailing via Amazon SES (Google Cloud Platform and Azure coming soon)
wildduck - Opinionated email server
Apache - Mirror of Apache HTTP Server. Issues: http://issues.apache.org