You may have heard quantum computers will break encryption. That’s a long way off, but Proton is mitigating this risk.

And the difference with our approach is that we’re implementing post-quantum protection for PGP in open collaboration with the community and experts, enabling anyone to analyze & use the standard. It’s post-quantum cryptography for the many, not just the few: https://proton.me/blog/post-quantum-encryption. (1/3)

Proton is building quantum-safe PGP encryption for everyone | Proton

Quantum computers may someday break current encryption. Proton is leading the standardization of quantum-resistant encryption in OpenPGP for all to use.

Proton
Everyone deserves access to privacy and encryption. We believe in interoperability – no walled gardens – so we’re standardizing these algorithms within the OpenPGP community and we’ve published our draft proposal for anyone to analyze here: https://datatracker.ietf.org/doc/draft-wussler-openpgp-pqc/. (2/3)
Post-Quantum Cryptography in OpenPGP

This document defines a post-quantum public-key algorithm extension for the OpenPGP protocol. Given the generally assumed threat of a cryptographically relevant quantum computer, this extension provides a basis for long-term secure OpenPGP signatures and ciphertexts. Specifically, it defines composite public-key encryption based on ML- KEM (formerly CRYSTALS-Kyber), composite public-key signatures based on ML-DSA (formerly CRYSTALS-Dilithium), both in combination with elliptic curve cryptography, and SLH-DSA (formerly SPHINCS+) as a standalone public key signature scheme.

IETF Datatracker
Proton believes the internet should be private by default. Everyone deserves access to privacy and encryption. By developing post-quantum OpenPGP, we’re making sure everyone will be protected in the event that quantum computers undermine existing encryption methods. (3/3)
@protonmail is this one of those things that only really works if both sender and receiver are using it?
@Djromero Hi! For improved privacy, yes, both sender and recipient should be using Proton Mail or PGP encryption (https://proton.me/blog/what-is-pgp-encryption). However, we also allow you to send an encrypted email to a non-Proton user: https://proton.me/support/open-password-protected-emails.
What is PGP encryption and how does it work? | Proton

Learn what PGP encryption is and how it works, how secure PGP is, and the simplest way to secure your emails with PGP encryption.

Proton
@protonmail thank you. That’s what I thought. I just wanted to be sure. Keep up the good work!