Tuta Mail is the secure email provider with automatic encryption built in. It focuses on security, privacy and open source. Tuta Mail is known as the best ProtonMail alternative as it is the largest encrypted email service in the European Union. German data protection laws which are even better than [Swiss privacy laws]({https://tuta.com/blog/swiss-privacy-is-an-illusion}) make Tuta a great contender in the field of secure communications.
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Great app for a free service. Standard security features. Hosted in Germany.
Based on our record, Tutanota seems to be a lot more popular than OpenPGP. While we know about 177 links to Tutanota, we've tracked only 4 mentions of OpenPGP. We are tracking product recommendations and mentions on various public social media platforms and blogs. They can help you identify which product is more popular and what people think of it.
A look at tuta.com and tutanota.com demonstrates that Tuta is using an Amazon Start of Authority (SOA) DNS record and 4 corresponding Amazon Name Server (NS) DNS records. Source: 5 months ago
I've moved on to Ferdium by the way via the ferdium-electron AUR package. I also use Tuta, Skiff, Google Messages and YouTube Music with it. Source: 5 months ago
Unfortunately, since you launched the new tuta.com website, I can't access anymore from China, unless I have a VPN service. Source: 5 months ago
Have a non business paid account. Can you change your current tutanota.com email to the tuta.com email? Source: 6 months ago
Weeks ago when tutanota became tuta I had same issues...wouldnt allow me log in. I clicked links provided by tuta to "migrate" data...never worked. Few days later...i was able to log in at https://mail.tutanota.com/login and continued until today, when my credentials were not "valid" anymore so tried at tuta.com and same thing. Source: 6 months ago
You're trusting the service (openpgp.org seems to be the only server offering this?) to serve up your correct key. Source: almost 2 years ago
Hello, I used openpgp.org to create a set of pgp keys, and I tested them out and all is well. I went to a web site and uploaded my pub key fine, but now it asks for a Verification Code/Key? What is that, and how do I get that off my newly created PGP keys? Thanks. Source: over 2 years ago
Not sure, but it looks like keys.openpgp.org is up. I found a keyserver still running where I could find my public key (this one: http://pgp.mit.edu/) and uploaded it to the openpgp.org one. This seems rather recent; there's a related post on r/GnuPG. Source: almost 3 years ago
Anyways; it looks like openpgp.org is trying to get on the right side of these crowds ... Source: almost 3 years ago
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