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MailCloak PE GPG Encryption addon for Firefox in Public Beta!

March 16th, 2009

MailCloak Personal Edition, Email Encryption for Firefox is finally open for Beta Testers!

MailCloak is the new GPG based email encryption add-on for today’s top webmail services. MailCloak encrypts Google Gmail, Yahoo! Mail and MSN Live Hotmail with super strong 4096-bit key GPG encryption.

You can download the Firefox add-on directly from us, or from addons.mozilla.com! POP3 versions will be available soon, and the SMB (Small & Medium Business) version will be ready soon after that.

After you have installed MailCloak, you will be prompted to create a key pair, once that’s done you’re ready to go.

Check out our detailed quick-start guide if you want some hand-holding, otherwise go ahead and login to your web-based email account (This version supports Google’s Gmail, Yahoo! Mail and MSN Live Mail) and send someone an email. If MailCloak is turned on, your public key and an invitation to MailCloak will automatically be attached to this email. If the recipient is using GPG, PGP, or MailCloak, They will be able to send you encrypted email. When you get their key, you will be able to send them encrypted email. We’ve also created Cryptobot to make this easy to test.

Open Source Encryption, closed source connectivity.
We chose to build MailCloak on top of the industry standard, open source GNU Privacy Guard (GPG/GnuPG). GPG uses the OpenPGP standard, first written by Phil Zimmerman in 1982, OpenPGP-standard compliant encryption is used by 96 of the top fortune 100 companies, the Department of Defense, and millions of home and business users around the world.

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Gwebs, Security, email, email encryption, encryption, software , , , ,

Beta Update

May 30th, 2008

Well, we’ve had a working beta for several weeks now… but just working isn’t enough, so we have been adding features for the last few weeks. MailCloak now supports 11 email providers: Gmail, Hotmail, Live, MSN, Yahoo!, tom.com Sina, Sohu, 163, and more. We have updated our configuration page, got draft and attachment and message encryption working and stable, and whole lot more. We are now in the last phases of internal beta testing and, if all goes well, we will open our beta to the public some time next week.

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Gwebs, Security, email, email encryption, encryption, software , ,

The WebmailSafety 2.0 Walk-Through!

January 22nd, 2008

The WebmailSafety Tour!

WebmailSafety is Gwebs new encryption product for Gmail, Hotmail, Yahoo! Mail and AOL Mail and with WebmailSafety’s new 2.0 release out yesterday, it’s high time for a walkthrough!

But first, be sure to download WebmailSafety 2.0 at www.gwebs.com!

  1. The First Time You Run Gwebs WebmailSafety
  2. Logging into Webmail With A Secure Browser
  3. Receiving Normal Email
  4. Receiving Encrypted Email
  5. Sending Normal Email
  6. Sending Encrypted Email
  7. The Invitation Process
  1. The First Time You Run Gwebs WebmailSafety.
    1. Follow the wizard to create a WebmailSafety account and bind one or more email addresses to it.
    2. When you create an account, WebmailSafety automatically generates a key pair
      (a public key and a private key,)
      and binds it to your new account.
  2. Logging into Webmail With A Secure Browser.
    1. Run WebmailSafety and click on a bound email address.
    2. Click on your Email Account to Launch A Secure Browser

    3. WebmailSafety launches a safe version of Microsoft Internet Explorer (The plug-in is only installed when you
      launch MSIE from within WebmailSafety) and directs it to the correct domain.
    4. Manually login.
  3. Receiving Normal Email: It Just Works!
  4. Receiving Encrypted Email: It Just Works!
  5. Sending Normal Email.
    1. Go to the Gwebs icon in the Windows Task Bar and select “Disable Temporarily” so that it becomes checked.*
    2. Send email as usual.
  6. *The WebmailSafety Tray Icon should appear inside a circle with a line through it. (like this: Gwebs WebmailSafety Disabled Icon )

  7. Sending Encrypted Email.
    1. If WebmailSafety is disabled, go to the Gwebs icon in the Windows Task Bar and select “Disable Temporarily” so that it becomes unchecked.*
    2. If attaching files be sure to enter your recipient before selecting the files, so that WebmailSafety
      knows who’s key to use when encrypting the attachments.
    3. Send email as usual.**
  8. *The WebmailSafety Tray Icon should appear normal. (like this: WebmailSafety Enabled )

  9. The Invitation Process: If you don’t have a person’s public key.
    1. WebmailSafety will notify you that you don’t have their public key.
    2. Enter a Passphrase.
    3. Useing Symmetrical Encryption.

    4. WebmailSafety uses AES-256 Symmetrical Encryption to encrypt your email with this passphrase.
    5. WebmailSafety automatically attaches your public key and a WebmailSafety download link to this email so the recipient can easily install WebmailSafety, read, and reply to this email.
    6. Call, SMS, IM, or use some other method to tell your contact this passphrase.
    7. When the recipient replies to this email, their public key will be attached to their reply
    8. Now that you have their public key, simply send them email from the safe browser and it will be encrypted.

Well, that’s it for the walk through! Hope you enjoyed it, and don’t forget to check out www.gwebs.com for more info and new downloads!

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