+CC Joe & Alexander, who were the ones that had the problem. On Wed, Dec 28, 2022 at 07:33:53PM +0700, Bagas Sanjaya wrote: > On 12/28/22 07:03, Conor Dooley wrote: > > + > > +Proton Mail > > +*********** > > + > > +Proton Mail has a "feature" where it looks up keys using Web Key Directory > > +(WKD) and encrypts mail to any email recipients for which it finds a key. > > +Kernel.org publishes the WKD for all developers who have kernel.org accounts. > > +As a result, emails sent using Proton Mail to kernel.org addresses will be > > +encrypted. > > +Unfortunately, Proton Mail does not provide a mechanism to disable the > > +automatic encryption, viewing it as a privacy feature. > > +This affects mail sent from their web GUI, from other mail clients using their > > +mail "bridge", as well as patches sent using ``git send-email``. > > +Unless a way to disable this "feature" is introduced, Proton Mail is unsuited > > +to kernel development. > > All mails sent via Proton Mail SMTP relay? I'm not quite sure what the purpose of your question is, sorry. When I say "bridge", I mean their program by the same name: https://proton.me/mail/bridge When I was using proton, I do not recall being able to send mail using proton without the bridge, their web GUI or their app. Perhaps Joe or Alexander are aware of anything that's changed in the last year. > Also, why is sending encrypted emails > to public mailing lists (like LKML) not a good idea? Is that a real or rhetorical question? Note that the public mailing list *does not* receive the encrypted copies of the emails. Thanks, Conor.
Attachment:
signature.asc
Description: PGP signature