
Last week, a trend on twitter about a woman that had her phone robed and consequently lost money due to bank accounts being connected to it, made me rethink my security model. It made me realize how careless most users are with sensitive information. Everyone walks around with smartphones, carrying data that a few years ago would’ve been in a safe at home.
My mentor brought up encrypting our e-mails. At first, I was a bit skeptical about the need for this, after all, I was never a person to send sensitive information through e-mail. However, how weirded out would I feel having someone reading my private conversations?
It’s disturbing to think that anyone could intercept our internet packages and read our deepest secrets. I admit that I’m one of those people that truly uses e-mail, almost like any other push notification messenger. If there was someone tracking my average time to reply it would be less than 30 minutes almost always.
People tend to dismiss online security (as a lot of other online things) because they can’t really idealize the damage. But how would you feel if your neighbor intercepted all your mail and letters, read them, and you didn’t even know the motivation behind this? Feels bad, right?
That’s why it’s time to begin taking online security seriously. Encrypting your e-mails doesn’t need to be the hardest tech task of this week.
I was able to discover Mailvelope through my Outreachy Mentor. It’s the best match for me, works wonders with my gmail account and I understood all the functionalities in less than a week.
It’s Open-Source, secure, easy to deal with, can be integrated to your gmail, outlook and much more. Also, work as an extension on your browser. Having a girly moment here, but the visuals are super cute, I’m having a great time with this encrypter.
Let’s take digital security seriously and avoid situations like that. Having a phone robbed is a terrible experience, but waking up the next day to know that every penny that you saved got stolen is heartbreaking. Stay safe!
Copy? Over.
