techcrunch.com Open in urlscan Pro
76.13.32.141  Public Scan

URL: https://techcrunch.com/2021/09/06/protonmail-logged-ip-address-of-french-activist-after-order-by-swiss-authorities/
Submission Tags: privacy tech technology human rights surveillance dictatorship authoritarian court Search All
Submission: On April 21 via manual from US — Scanned from US

Form analysis 1 forms found in the DOM

<form action="" class="form newsletter-form" id="">
  <div class="form-field form-field--checkbox form-field--default form-field--required">
    <div class="form-field__checkbox-wrapper " id="wrapper-Readership"><input class="form-field__input form-field__input--checkbox " id="checkbox-Readership" name="newsletters" type="checkbox" value="Readership"><label class="checkbox-field-label"
        for="checkbox-Readership">Daily News</label></div>
    <div class="form-field__checkbox-wrapper " id="wrapper-Readership-wkend"><input class="form-field__input form-field__input--checkbox " id="checkbox-Readership-wkend" name="newsletters" type="checkbox" value="Readership-wkend"><label
        class="checkbox-field-label" for="checkbox-Readership-wkend">Week in Review</label></div>
    <div class="form-field__checkbox-wrapper " id="wrapper-Readership-startups"><input class="form-field__input form-field__input--checkbox " id="checkbox-Readership-startups" name="newsletters" type="checkbox" value="Readership-startups"><label
        class="checkbox-field-label" for="checkbox-Readership-startups">Startups Weekly</label></div>
    <div class="form-field__checkbox-wrapper " id="wrapper-Readership-event-updates"><input class="form-field__input form-field__input--checkbox " id="checkbox-Readership-event-updates" name="newsletters" type="checkbox"
        value="Readership-event-updates"><label class="checkbox-field-label" for="checkbox-Readership-event-updates">Event Updates</label></div>
    <div class="form-field__checkbox-wrapper " id="wrapper-Readership-sponsorship"><input class="form-field__input form-field__input--checkbox " id="checkbox-Readership-sponsorship" name="newsletters" type="checkbox"
        value="Readership-sponsorship"><label class="checkbox-field-label" for="checkbox-Readership-sponsorship">Advertising Updates</label></div>
  </div>
  <div class="newsletter-signup__disclaimer">By subscribing, you are agreeing to <a href="https://legal.yahoo.com/us/en/yahoo/terms/otos/index.html" target="_blank">Yahoo's Terms</a> and
    <a href="https://legal.yahoo.com/us/en/yahoo/privacy/index.html" target="_blank">Privacy Policy</a>.</div>
  <fieldset class="form-field form-field--email form-field--default form-field--required"><input class="form-field__input form-field__input--email" name="email" type="email" required="" value=""><label class="form-field__label">Email</label>
  </fieldset><button class="button button--black button--primary" disabled="">Subscribe</button>
</form>

Text Content

TechCrunch
plus-bold
TechCrunch
Login
Searchsearch
 * Startups
 * Venture
 * Security
 * AI
 * Crypto
 * Apps
 * Events
 * Startup Battlefield
 * More


Close Screen
x(opens in a new window)facebook(opens in a new window)linkedin(opens in a new
window)reddit(opens in a new window)mail(opens in a new window)Copy Share Link
Link CopiedLink Copied
Privacy


PROTONMAIL LOGGED IP ADDRESS OF FRENCH ACTIVIST AFTER ORDER BY SWISS AUTHORITIES

Natasha Lomas, Romain Dillet / 1:46 AM HST•September 6, 2021
comment Comment

cameraImage Credits: Jaye Haych / Unsplash

ProtonMail, a hosted email service with a focus on end-to-end encrypted
communications, has been facing criticism after a police report showed that
French authorities managed to obtain the IP address of a French activist who was
using the online service. The company has communicated widely about the
incident, stating that it doesn’t log IP addresses by default and it only
complies with local regulation — in that case Swiss law. While ProtonMail didn’t
cooperate with French authorities, French police sent a request to Swiss police
via Europol to force the company to obtain the IP address of one of its users.

For the past year, a group of people have taken over a handful of commercial
premises and apartments near Place Sainte Marthe in Paris. They want to fight
against gentrification, real estate speculation, Airbnb and high-end
restaurants. While it started as a local conflict, it quickly became a symbolic
campaign. They attracted newspaper headlines when they started occupying
premises rented by Le Petit Cambodge — a restaurant that was targeted by the
November 13, 2015 terrorist attacks in Paris.



Place Sainte Marthe, Paris. Image Credits: Chabe01 (opens in a new window) /
Wikimedia Commons (opens in a new window) under a CC BY-SA 4.0 (opens in a new
window) license.



On September 1, the group published an article on Paris-luttes.info, an
anti-capitalist news website, summing up different police investigations and
legal cases against some members of the group. According to their story, French
police sent an Europol request to ProtonMail in order to uncover the identity of
the person who created a ProtonMail account — the group was using this email
address to communicate. The address has also been shared on various anarchist
websites.



The next day, @MuArF on Twitter shared an abstract of a police report detailing
ProtonMail’s reply. According to @MuArF, the police report is related to the
ongoing investigation against the group who occupied various premises around
Place Sainte-Marthe. It says that French police received a message from Europol.
That message contains details about the ProtonMail account.

Here’s what the report says:

>  * The company PROTONMAIL informs us that the email address has been created
>    on … The IP address linked to the account is the following: …
>  * The device used is a … device identified with the number …
>  * The data transmitted by the company is limited to that due to the privacy
>    policy of PROTONMAIL TECHNOLOGIES.



ProtonMail’s founder and CEO Andy Yen reacted to the police report on Twitter
without mentioning the specific circumstances of that case in particular.
“Proton must comply with Swiss law. As soon as a crime is committed, privacy
protections can be suspended and we’re required by Swiss law to answer requests
from Swiss authorities,” he wrote.

In particular, Andy Yen wants to make it clear that his company didn’t cooperate
with French police nor Europol. It seems like Europol acted as the communication
channel between French authorities and Swiss authorities. At some point, Swiss
authorities took over the case and sent a request to ProtonMail directly. The
company references these requests as “foreign requests approved by Swiss
authorities” in its transparency report.



TechCrunch contacted ProtonMail founder and CEO Andy Yen with questions about
the case.



One key question is exactly when the targeted account holder was notified that
their data had been requested by Swiss authorities since — per ProtonMail —
notification is obligatory under Swiss law.

However, Yen told us that — “for privacy and legal reasons” — he is unable to
comment on specific details of the case or provide “non-public information on
active investigations,” adding: “You would have to direct these inquiries to the
Swiss authorities.”

At the same time, he did point us to this public page, where ProtonMail provides
information for law enforcement authorities seeking data about users of its
end-to-end encrypted email service, including setting out a “ProtonMail user
notification policy.”

Here the company reiterates that Swiss law “requires a user to be notified if a
third party makes a request for their private data and such data is to be used
in a criminal proceeding” — however it also notes that “in certain
circumstances” a notification “can be delayed.”



Per this policy, Proton says delays can affect notifications if: There is a
temporary prohibition on notice by the Swiss legal process itself, by Swiss
court order or “applicable Swiss law”; or where “based on information supplied
by law enforcement, we, in our absolute discretion, believe that providing
notice could create a risk of injury, death, or irreparable damage to an
identifiable individual or group of individuals.”

“As a general rule though, targeted users will eventually be informed and
afforded the opportunity to object to the data request, either by ProtonMail or
by Swiss authorities,” the policy adds.

So, in the specific case, it looks likely that ProtonMail was either under legal
order to delay notification to the account holder — given what appears to be up
to eight months between the logging being instigated and disclosure of it — or
it had been provided with information by the Swiss authorities which led it to
conclude that delaying notice was essential to avoid a risk of “injury, death,
or irreparable damage” to a person or persons (NB: It is unclear what
“irreparable damage” means in this context, and whether it could be interpreted
figuratively — as “damage” to a person’s/group’s interests, for example, such as
to a criminal investigation, not solely bodily harm — which would make the
policy considerably more expansive).

In either scenario the level of transparency being afforded to individuals by
Swiss law having a mandatory notification requirement when a person’s data has
been requested looks severely limited if the same law authorities can,
essentially, gag notifications — potentially for long periods (seemingly more
than half a year in this specific case).



ProtonMail’s public disclosures also log an alarming rise in requests for data
by Swiss authorities.

According to its transparency report, ProtonMail received 13 orders from Swiss
authorities back in 2017 — but that had swelled to over three and a half
thousand (3,572!) by 2020.

The number of foreign requests to Swiss authorities which are being approved has
also risen, although not as steeply — with ProtonMail reporting receiving 13
such requests in 2017 — rising to 195 in 2020.

The company says it complies with lawful requests for user data but it also says
it contests orders where it does not believe them to be lawful. And its
reporting shows an increase in contested orders — with ProtonMail contesting
three orders back in 2017 but in 2020 it pushed back against 750 of the data
requests it received.



Per ProtonMail’s privacy policy, the information it can provide on a user
account in response to a valid request under Swiss law may include account
information provided by the user (such as an email address); account
activity/metadata (such as sender, recipient email addresses; IP addresses
incoming messages originated from; the times messages were sent and received;
message subjects, etc.); total number of messages, storage used and last login
time; and unencrypted messages sent from external providers to ProtonMail. As an
end-to-end encrypted email provider, it cannot decrypt email data so is unable
to provide information on the contents of email, even when served with a
warrant.



However, in its transparency report, the company also signals an additional
layer of data collection which it may be (legally) obligated to carry out —
writing that: “In addition to the items listed in our privacy policy, in extreme
criminal cases, ProtonMail may also be obligated to monitor the IP addresses
which are being used to access the ProtonMail accounts which are engaged in
criminal activities.”



> In general though, unless you are based 15 miles offshore in international
> waters, it is not possible to ignore court orders. Andy Yen



It’s that IP monitoring component which has caused such alarm among privacy
advocates now — and no small criticism of Proton’s marketing claims as a
“user-privacy-centric” company.

It has faced particular criticism for marketing claims of providing “anonymous
email” and for the wording of the caveat in its transparency disclosure — where
it talks about IP logging only occurring in “extreme criminal cases.”



Few would agree that anti-gentrification campaigners meet that bar.

At the same time, Proton does provide users with an onion address — meaning
activists concerned about tracking can access its encrypted email service using
Tor which makes it harder for their IP address to be tracked. So it is providing
tools for users to protect themselves against IP monitoring (as well as protect
the contents of their emails from being snooped on), even though its own service
can, in certain circumstances, be turned into an IP monitoring tool by Swiss law
enforcement.

In the backlash around the revelation of the IP logging of the French activists,
Yen said via Twitter that ProtonMail will be providing a more prominent link to
its onion address on its website:



Proton does also offer a VPN service of its own — and Yen has claimed that Swiss
law does not allow it to log its VPN users’ IP addresses. So it’s interesting to
speculate whether the activists might have been able to evade the IP logging if
they had been using both Proton’s end-to-end encrypted email and its VPN
service.



“If they were using Tor or ProtonVPN, we would have been able to provide an IP,
but it would be the IP of the VPN server, or the IP of the Tor exit node,” Yen
told TechCrunch when we asked about this.



“We do protect against this threat model via our onion site
(protonmail.com/tor),” he added. “In general though, unless you are based 15
miles offshore in international waters, it is not possible to ignore court
orders.”

“The Swiss legal system, while not perfect, does provide a number of checks and
balances, and it’s worth noting that even in this case, approval from three
authorities in two countries was required, and that’s a fairly high bar which
prevents most (but not all) abuse of the system.”



In a public response on Reddit, Proton also writes that it is “deeply concerned”
about the case — reiterating that it was unable to contest the order in this
instance.

“The prosecution in this case seems quite aggressive,” it added. “Unfortunately,
this is a pattern we have increasingly seen in recent years around the world
(for example in France where terror laws are inappropriately used). We will
continue to campaign against such laws and abuses.”



Zooming out, in another worrying development that could threaten the privacy of
internet users in Europe, European Union lawmakers have signaled they want to
work to find ways to enable lawful access to encrypted data — even as they
simultaneously claim to support strong encryption.



Again, privacy campaigners are concerned.

ProtonMail and a number of other end-to-end encrypted services warned in an open
letter in January that EU lawmakers risk setting the region on a dangerous path
toward backdooring encryption if they continue in this direction.

> ProtonMail, Threema, Tresorit and Tutanota warn EU lawmakers over
> ‘anti-encryption’ push



Update: Open Terms Archive has spotted a change to ProtonMail’s privacy policy.
The company added a line that reads: “If you are breaking Swiss law, ProtonMail
can be legally compelled to log your IP address as part of a Swiss criminal
investigation. This obligation however does not extend to ProtonVPN (see VPN
privacy policy here). Additional details can be found in our transparency
report.”



More TechCrunch


ROOMS, A 3D DESIGN APP AND 'COZY GAME,' GETS A MAJOR UPDATE AS USERS JUMP TO
250K


MARISSA MAYER'S STARTUP JUST ROLLED OUT PHOTO SHARING AND EVENT PLANNING APPS,
AND THE INTERNET ISN'T SURE WHAT TO THINK


BOSTON DYNAMICS’ ATLAS HUMANOID ROBOT GOES ELECTRIC


DON’T BLAME MKBHD FOR THE FATE OF HUMANE AI AND FISKER


close


PLEASE LOGIN TO COMMENT

Login / Create Account



TECHCRUNCH EARLY STAGE

Founder Summit April 25, Boston
REGISTER TODAY




SIGN UP FOR NEWSLETTERS

See all newsletters(opens in a new window)

Daily News
Week in Review
Startups Weekly
Event Updates
Advertising Updates
By subscribing, you are agreeing to Yahoo's Terms and Privacy Policy.
EmailSubscribe
x(opens in a new window)facebook(opens in a new window)linkedin(opens in a new
window)reddit(opens in a new window)mail(opens in a new window)Copy Share Link
checkmarkCopy


TAGS

 * backdoor
 * encryption
 * Policy
 * Proton
 * protonmail


Privacy


PROTONMAIL LOGGED IP ADDRESS OF FRENCH ACTIVIST AFTER ORDER BY SWISS AUTHORITIES

Natasha Lomas, Romain Dillet
1:46 AM HST•September 6, 2021
ProtonMail, a hosted email service with a focus on end-to-end encrypted
communications, has been facing criticism after a police report showed that
French authorities managed to obtain the IP addre...

Transportation


TESLA LAYOFFS, CYBERTRUCK RECALLS AND SERVE ROBOTICS GOES PUBLIC

Kirsten Korosec, Rebecca Bellan
9:15 AM HST•April 21, 2024
Welcome back to TechCrunch Mobility — your central hub for news and insights on
the future of transportation. Sign up here — just click TechCrunch Mobility — to
receive the newsletter every weekend...

AI


WOMEN IN AI: ANNA KORHONEN STUDIES THE INTERSECTION BETWEEN LINGUISTICS AND AI

Kyle Wiggers
5:30 AM HST•April 21, 2024
To give AI-focused women academics and others their well-deserved — and overdue
— time in the spotlight, TechCrunch has been publishing a series of interviews
focused on remarkable women who’ve con...

Featured Article


HOW UNITED AIRLINES USES AI TO MAKE FLYING THE FRIENDLY SKIES A BIT EASIER

“I think the travel industry has so many different examples of where AI can be
used both fo...
Frederic Lardinois
5:00 AM HST•April 21, 2024
Fintech


FINTECH STARTUP RAMP SEES 32% BUMP IN VALUATION, MERCURY EXPANDS INTO CONSUMER
BANKING

Mary Ann Azevedo
4:30 AM HST•April 21, 2024
Welcome to TechCrunch Fintech! This week, we’re looking at Ramp’s big raise and
valuation jump, Mercury’s move into personal banking, Klarna’s new credit card,
global funding roun...

Gadgets


THIS CAMERA TRADES PICTURES FOR AI POETRY

Haje Jan Kamps
10:31 AM HST•April 20, 2024
The Poetry Camera takes the concept of photography to new heights by generating
poetry based on the visuals it encounters.

Social


BOSTON DYNAMICS UNVEILS A NEW ROBOT, CONTROVERSY OVER MKBHD, AND LAYOFFS AT
TESLA

Kyle Wiggers
10:15 AM HST•April 20, 2024
Welcome, folks, to Week in Review (WiR), TechCrunch’s weekly news recap. The
weather’s getting hotter — but not quite as hot as the generative AI space,
which saw a slew of new mo...

AI


WOMEN IN AI: EWA LUGER EXPLORES HOW AI AFFECTS CULTURE — AND VICE VERSA

Kyle Wiggers
10:00 AM HST•April 20, 2024
Ewa Luger, profiled as part of TechCrunch’s series on women in AI, is
co-director at the Institute of Design Informatics.

Apps


U.S. HOUSE PASSES REVISED BILL TO BAN TIKTOK OR FORCE SALE

Anthony Ha
8:29 AM HST•April 20, 2024
The U.S. House of Representatives passed a bill this afternoon that would
require TikTok-owner ByteDance to sell the popular social media app or see it
banned in the United States. Efforts to ban T...

AI


WHY VECTOR DATABASES ARE HAVING A MOMENT AS THE AI HYPE CYCLE PEAKS

Paul Sawers
5:00 AM HST•April 20, 2024
Vector databases are all the rage, judging by the number of startups entering
the space and the investors ponying up for a piece of the pie. The proliferation
of large language models (LLMs) and th...

Venture


NOTABLE CAPITAL’S HANS TUNG ON THE STATE OF VC AND THE UPSIDE TO DOWN ROUNDS

Mary Ann Azevedo, Theresa Loconsolo
4:30 AM HST•April 20, 2024
To some investors, “down round” is a dirty phrase, but not to Notable Capital’s
Hans Tung. Hans is a managing partner at Notable Capital, formerly GGV Capital,
a venture firm focusing on investment...

AI


THIS WEEK IN AI: WHEN ‘OPEN SOURCE’ ISN’T SO OPEN

Kyle Wiggers
3:15 AM HST•April 20, 2024
Keeping up with an industry as fast-moving as AI is a tall order. So until an AI
can do it for you, here’s a handy roundup of recent stories in the world of
machine learning, along with notable res...

Security


LAWMAKERS VOTE TO REAUTHORIZE US SPYING LAW THAT CRITICS SAY EXPANDS GOVERNMENT
SURVEILLANCE

Zack Whittaker
3:00 AM HST•April 20, 2024
House and Senate lawmakers passed a bill reauthorizing the controversial Section
702 powers under FISA, which allows U.S. spy agencies to conduct warrantless
searches of Americans’ communicat...

AI


WOMEN IN AI: ALLISON COHEN ON BUILDING RESPONSIBLE AI PROJECTS

Kyle Wiggers
3:00 AM HST•April 20, 2024
Alison Cohen, profiled as part of TechCrunch’s series on women in AI, is a
senior AI projects manager at Mila, a Quebec-based AI research group.

Featured Article


INDIA’S ELECTION OVERSHADOWED BY THE RISE OF ONLINE MISINFORMATION

As India kicks off the world’s biggest election, which starts on April 19 and
runs through ...
Jagmeet Singh
2:00 AM HST•April 20, 2024
Space


CESIUMASTRO CLAIMS FORMER EXEC SPILLED TRADE SECRETS TO UPSTART COMPETITOR
ANYSIGNAL

Aria Alamalhodaei
11:57 AM HST•April 19, 2024
CesiumAstro alleges in a newly filed lawsuit that a former executive disclosed
trade secrets and confidential information about sensitive tech, investors and
customers to a competing startup. Austi...

Featured Article


YOUR ANDROID PHONE COULD HAVE STALKERWARE — HERE’S HOW TO REMOVE IT

This simple guide helps you identify and remove common consumer-grade spyware
apps from your Andr...
Zack Whittaker
11:15 AM HST•April 19, 2024
AI


TOO MANY MODELS

Devin Coldewey
11:13 AM HST•April 19, 2024
How many AI models is too many? It depends on how you look at it, but 10 a week
is probably a bit much. That’s roughly how many we’ve seen roll out in the last
few days, and it’s ...



TECHCRUNCH EARLY STAGE 2024


HARVARD’S STARTUP WHISPERER, PETER GLADSTONE, REVEALS SECRETS TO VALIDATING
CONSUMER DEMAND AT TECHCRUNCH EARLY STAGE

TechCrunch Events
10:18 AM HST•April 19, 2024
Validating consumer demand is a crucial step for any startup, and TechCrunch
Early Stage is offering a golden opportunity to learn how to do it right. Peter
Gladstone, senior adviser for startups a...

Social


POST NEWS, THE A16Z-FUNDED TWITTER ALTERNATIVE, IS SHUTTING DOWN

Amanda Silberling
9:13 AM HST•April 19, 2024
Post was backed by Andreessen Horowitz and Scott Galloway, an NYU professor and
tech commentator, but the platform never disclosed how much it raised.

Startups


STARTUPS WEEKLY: IS THE WIND GOING OUT OF THE AI SAILS?

Haje Jan Kamps
9:05 AM HST•April 19, 2024
Welcome to Startups Weekly — your weekly recap of everything you can’t miss from
the world of startups. Sign up here to get it in your inbox every Friday. After
years of booming growth, the AI indu...



 * About
   * TechCrunch
   * Staff
   * Contact Us
   * Advertise
   * Crunchboard Jobs
   * Site Map
 * Legal
   * Terms of Service
   * Privacy Policy
   * RSS Terms of Use
   * Privacy Dashboard
   * Code of Conduct
   * About Our Ads
 * Trending Tech Topics
   * Cybertruck Recall
   * Lacework Valuation
   * Atlas Robot
   * Meta AI
   * Google Protests
   * Tech Layoffs
   * ChatGPT

FacebookFacebook(opens in a new window)XX(opens in a new
window)YouTubeYouTube(opens in a new window)InstagramInstagram(opens in a new
window)LinkedInLinkedIn(opens in a new window)MastodonMastodon(opens in a new
window)

© 2024 Yahoo.All rights reserved.Powered by WordPress VIP(opens in a new
window).