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Posts Tagged ‘email encryption software’

Comparison about Postcard and E-mail and also Registered letter and Encrypted E-mail, e.g. with MailCloak

August 28th, 2009

Security issues have been at the news recently and all the time more and more things are coming up. So many people are interested about their own security, when spending time with online societies and communicating with others, but just so few people are really using any software which is offering better security. The most of these people are just waiting the easiest one to use and cheapest one to buy, the whole field of Internet security seems to be offering too many options and choices. “Do I really need this? Which one is best for me? It’s too difficult to use, isn’t it ?” These questions are common among people, who have interest but don’t know where to start.

It seems to be that the most of the people have a belief that “e-mail is pretty secured service”, and “anyway no-one is interested about my e-mails”, but in fact there are so many people who have interest for normal users’ accounts, and information. And e-mail itself, is not secured at all. Even if the user’s own computer is having anti-virus software and firewall doesn’t guarantee that outgoing or incoming messages are secured. The following table (Table 1.) shows a little comparison between postcard, e-mail, registered letter and encrypted e-mail. This kind of comparison is quite common while talking about security issues among delivering messages from person to another. In my humble opinion I think this comparison is pretty close to truth, and gives you the idea, how messages are really going “out-there”.

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The following picture (Pic.1.) shows how message can change on the way and how come neither sender or receiver cannot be sure that if the message has been tampered or not, if any kind of encryption is not used. This case represents also the postcard. Posting a letter or encrypted e-mail, then the possibility that message changes on the way is decreasing significantly, it’s represented in a picture (Pic.2.).

Pic 1. Postcard / E-mail without encryption

Pic 2. Letter / E-mail with encryption

The animations above are representing the situations of sending a message via postcard and letter / or e-mail with and without encryption. In both cases sender and receiver are not aware which kind of picture the other one is seeing. They can just believe that “This is the picture the receiver will see. / This is the picture the sender wanted me to see.” So it is very difficult to prove afterwards that was the message changing on the way or not. Well, common sense says: “How about I give him/her a call and ask about this?” But are people really willing to do it after every single message? I am not. Then the whole idea about sending an email is basically useless, if it’s not sure whether the message is going through without changing on the way.

Whenever people are sending their personal information, job applications, contracts, what ever that contains any piece of personal information, like name, social security number, address, phone number, etc. Why not using encryption ? Well, at least I’m not willing to put those pieces of information to the postcard, are You ?

There was earlier a bit similar post in our blog: “The Difference Between A Stolen Mailbox and a Steel Envelope: An interview with gWebs CTO Anderson Jin.” Please check it through also!

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MailCloak, Security, email, email encryption, encryption, personal , , , , , , , ,

MailCloak Pro in Public Beta!

April 17th, 2009

MailCloak Pro is now in Public Beta!

MailCloak for Pro is a combination of all of Global Web Security Systems’ breakthrough encryption programs, and a little more. Download MailCloak Pro here!

MailCloak Pro = MailCloak for Firefox + MailCloak for Mail Clients + MailCloak for Internet Explorer (only available in MailCloak Pro)!

MailCloak was designed from the ground up to be the first encryption program for browser-based email, and POP3/SMTP email. MailCloak Pro supports ALL mail clients, while making GnuPG public-key encryption so simple anyone can use it! And everyone using it is the goal, That’s why MailCloak works with today’s most popular webmail systems as well.

Now you and your contacts can easily exchange encrypted email, and it doesnt matter what they use - Gmail on Firefox? Hotmail in Internet Explorer? YourCustomDomain.Com with Outlook (custom domains are only supported in Outlook and our upcoming SMB version)? They’re all supported! And MailCloak works with cross platform systems too -  that’s because we use the Gnu Privacy Guard MailCloak compatible with tons of other GPG programs on any platform you can think of. Mac, Linux, even legacy DOS users can exchange email with MailCloak users.

Key features include:

Automatic Key Exchange: MailCloak’s automatic key exchange feature automatically attached your public keys to outgoing emails, and automatically imports your contact’s public keys from incoming emails.

Automatic Encryption: Just turn MailCloak on and send email as usual - if you have already done a key exchange, your email will be encrypted.

Respect for Privacy: MailCloak stores your keys on your computer, not ours. So you can be confident that only you and your recipients can read MailCloak encrypted emails

End-to-End Encryption: MailCloak encrypts your email on your computer, and decrypts it on the recipient’s computer. Absolutely no one else will ever be able to read your email. See my previous post to understand the difference between HTTP/S encryption and End-to-End encryption.

Here’s an animation of MailCloak working in Mozilla Thunderbird:
Encrypt and Digital Signatures in MailCloak For MailClients

MailCloak Pro is tested and works with the following email clients:

  • Outlook 2002
  • Outlook 2003
  • Outlook2007
  • Foxmail 5
  • Foxmail 6
  • Outlook Express 6
  • Koomail 5.32
  • Thunderbird 2.0.0.21
  • DreamMail 4.4

If you don’t see your email client on the list, don’t fret, MailCloak for Mail Clients  works with most (all that we’ve tested) Windows XP POP3/SMTP Mail clients- so go ahead, download MailCloak and give it a spin.

MailCloak has also been tested on following web browsers:

Mozilla Firefox 3.0 - 3.1b (not included in our current beta, but can be added seperately with a free download and will be included in future releases.)

Microsoft Internet Explorer 6, 7

And all Trident based browsers, including (but not limited to):

  • Avant Browser  11.0
  • gisoon 1.0
  • GreenBrowser 5.0
  • maxthon 2.0
  • MyIE 3
  • Tencent Treveler 4
  • The World Browser 2

Download MailCloak Pro here!

If you would like to report that MailCloak works with your email client or browser, or if you experience any problems installing or using MailCloak, please let us know!

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Gwebs, MailCloak, Release, Security, email, encryption, new, software , ,

MailCloak for Mail Clients now in public beta!

April 9th, 2009

MailCloak for Mail Clients now in public beta!

MailCloak for Mail Clients, a cross-compatible cousin of MailCloak for Firefox, is the first GnuPG encryption plug-in which works in any email program, and it’s super easy to use too! You just install it on your Windows XP or Vista computer and then continue sending email with your current email client.

MailCloak supports: Outlook, Outlook Express, Thunderbird, Foxmail, Eudora, Pegasus Mail, Lotus Notes, and more (we haven’t tested all email clients, but it works with everything we’ve tested).

To start using MailCloak for Mail Clients, you don’t have change a thing, just download, install, do a key exchange, and start sending strong GnuPG encrypted emails! MailCloak even works with your existing PGP keys.

Click here to go to the MailCloak for MailClients download page.

Using MailCloak in Thunderbird

MailCloak for Mail Clients allows users of any POP3 or SMTP email service to use MailCloak’s GnuPG email encryption. GnuPG is strong PGP encryption with up to 4096 bit public keys, and MailCloak is compatible with all other GnuPG encryption programs, so with MailCloak you can send secure email to anyone on just about any platform.

MailCloak supports Outlook, Thunderbird, Eudora, and more (we think it supports all POP3/SMTP mail clients, but we can’t test them all).  If you use webmail, like Yahoo! mail or Gmail, try MailCloak for Firefox!

MailCloak GPG Encryption in Windows

We worked really hard to ensure using MailCloak for Mail Clients is easy as pie.

To use MailCloak for Mail Clients install it and fire up your mail client – which ever it may be.

At this point you should notice the MailCloak floating menu. Right click it to turn it on, and send an email. MailCloak will automatically attach your public key to this message if you don’t have the recipients public key, or encrypt the message if you do. When you are done sending encrypted messages, simply turn MailCloak off and write emails as usual.

To make MailCloak even easier, we’ve created an automated testing program called Cryptobot. Turn MailCloak on to attach your public key to all outgoing email, send Cryptobot an email, and wait for a reply to see what happens!

After you give MailCloak for Mail Clients a whirl, please tell us what you think on the MailCloak Encryption Forum. You can also use the forum to ask us your questions. We’ll do our best to answer your questions and help you through any problems you might have.

You also can find documentation on our email encryption wiki.

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MailCloak, Release, Security, email, email encryption, encryption , , , ,

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 , ,

Gwebs Website goes to 3.0, MailCloak in Beta!

April 21st, 2008

Here at Global Web Security we have been working round the clock to bring our users a new, brighter, better, more functional and more interesting website. Our homepage has undergone a complete rewrite and redesign.

Gwebs Homepage Banner

We’ve added a forum and tons of information about our MailCloak software (which provides strong encryption for webmail), as well as brief introductions for products that are in development: PassDancer our biometric authentication software, DriveCloak and DocCloak. In-depth documentation is coming soon!

MailCloak - Strong Encryption For Webmail

Also MailCloak is now “open” for beta testing. Sign up here!

Download MailCloak Encryption for Webmail

About MailCloak: MailCloak is Strong encryption software for Webmail. MailCloak utilizes GnuPG to encrypt email on Gmail, Yahoo! Mail, Hotmail and re em

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MailCloak Webmail Encryption Open for Firefox Testers

November 30th, 1999

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

MailCloak GPG Encryption in Gmail

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.

Toggling MailCloak EncryptionYou 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 implemented by Phil Zimmerman in 1991, 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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Security, email, email encryption, encryption, software , , , , , ,