@GnuPG @todd_a_jacobs @letsencrypt #GnuPG itself has improved its capabilities and squashed a number of bugs in the last four years. You can see from the commit history of the #ObjectivePGP library used by #PGPro that there were some substantive changes and important fixes in that library since the last release of the app. On #iOS, such libraries need to be compiled into the app signed by Apple, so none of those changes are in the App Store version.

https://github.com/krzyzanowskim/ObjectivePGP/commits

Commits · krzyzanowskim/ObjectivePGP

ObjectivePGP is an open-source library for iOS and macOS that provides developers with tools for implementing OpenPGP encryption and decryption, digital signing, and signature verification in their...

GitHub
@przemek I’ve read about Tutanota on your Gemlog. I’m testing it, but as you’ve written - it’s also separated app with some limitations. I am thinking if isn’t the best solution to use some external app for PGP (for iOS #PGPro) inside “compromised” ordinary e-mail, but with every standard client.