Atomic Mail promises secure communication with end-to-end encryption, which protects messages that only you and the sender ...
BellSouth unveiled last week a service that allows its business DSL customers to encrypt outgoing e-mail for enhanced security and privacy. BellSouth Secure Mail works with customers’ Microsoft ...
Anyone concerned about unwanted third parties such as big businesses or even hackers accessing sensitive data or conversations carried out via email might be interested in this quick guide which shows ...
If you send sensitive information through email, you risk someone intercepting and reading your messages. However, you can ensure that only you and the intended recipient can view the contents of your ...
Google is rolling out an end-to-end encrypted email feature for business customers, but it could spawn phishing attacks, particularly in non-Gmail inboxes. End-to-end encryption is a protection that ...
Google is strengthening email security by offering client-side encryption to Gmail users, even if they’re sending to recipients with other email providers. It means Gmail senders will be able to ...
Every day, billions of people shop online, log into bank accounts, send emails, join video meetings, and access cloud ...
When Google announced Tuesday that end-to-end encrypted messages were coming to Gmail for business users, some people balked, noting it wasn’t true E2EE as the term is known in privacy and security ...
Think email encryption is only for major corporations with secrets to hide? Think again. I'll show you why secure email has become a practical privacy upgrade for anyone who spends time online. When ...
Tumbleweed says later this month it will ship technology that makes it easier for corporations to send secure and encrypted e-mail from their existing messaging systems and messaging-enabled ...
You’ve probably heard that using standard email is like sending a message on the back of a postcard. Anybody who handles it can read the message. And you may have thought, “Who cares? It's not that ...