Amazing thing, unfortunately I won't be able to use it. I'm on ultimate plan which already costs quite a while and if scribe is going to be a paid add-on I will stick to local ollama models. Not the most convenient thing but it works.
Proton
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Proton Calendar is the world's first end-to-end encrypted calendar that allows you to keep your life private.
Proton Drive is a free end-to-end encrypted cloud storage that allows you to securely backup and share your files. It's open source, publicly audited, and Swiss-based.
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SimpleLogin lets you send and receive emails anonymously via easily-generated unique email aliases.
What? It's not available for ultimate users? I thought I was paying to have access to all features..
Fucking hell its exhausting trying to keep one step ahead of having this AI bullshit shoved into every service I use.
I'm not against AI. I'm just against it being embedded in literally everything. I
If I want to "consult" an AI to have it look at my code for syntax errors or something like that, I'll go to its website and use it from there, accepting that yes... That particular bit of code or text is going to be scraped.
But the step from there to "always be reading everything I do is fucking massive.
You have to turn it on.
Yeah that's fair enough. But I have to say it's still frustrating seeing everyone investing so much money on this exact same feature. I'm not sure we have had time to figure out how people use this, everyone is just frightened to be left behind.
I hardly ever type emails anyway so it is almost useless to me 😂
Pretty sad all the people getting mad about an optional opt-in feature. I think this is pretty cool. If it’s free to use with my existing unlimited plan I’ll probably use it regularly, otherwise if I have to pay more I’ll probably just keep using ChatGPT since I already pay for that.
So it's only available in the business plan, and at additional cost? Meh.
So, just for clarity. Even if this rolls out to all paid plans. This is opt in specifically right? Or at minimum can be entirely disabled?
Yes
Hey look it's one of the reasons I started my switch from Google manifesting in my new system, how wonderful! Can the AI winter fully arrive already?
This is opt in and you have to pay for it. Plus runs locally. Nothing like Google
It's enabled by default and can send your email drafts to their server. The first time you try to use it (by clicking the Scribe button), it asks whether you want to use the local version or the cloud version. It's easy to disable it completely in Settings.
It does not, and cannot, train on your inbox, due to end-to-end-encryption.
More info: https://proton.me/support/proton-scribe-writing-assistant
I would prefer if the inital prompt included an option to disabled Scribe completely, and a warning about the privacy implications of enabling it, but overall I think their approach is good enough for my privacy needs.
End to end encryption means it can be trained on your inbox, especially locally. It’s not encrypted at rest on your side, else you wouldn’t be able to read it.
That’s why Facebook’s whole “WhatsApp is e2e encrypted, we can’t see anything” is and was a whole farce. They wouldn’t even make the claim in court. People even proved that they could exfiltrate data from WhatsApp after it made it to a users phone over to the Facebook app and boom, e2e didn’t matter at all.
It sounds like your main concern is that once your inbox is decrypted by your local device it could be used by Proton to train Scribe or for some other (perhaps nefarious) purpose.
For the first point, I think the technical challenge of creating a distributed machine learning algorithm, which runs locally on each user's device and then somehow aggregates the results, is much more difficult than downloading and using an existing model like Scribe does currently, but I agree that it is theoretically possible. If Proton ever overcomes that challenge and offers that feature, I hope they handle it as I suggested above for Scribe: an option to disable it the first time you use it. As long as I could disable it, I would consider the risk minimal. As it stands today, I consider the risk negligible.
For the second point, it's true Proton could program their app (or their website) to send your decrypted inbox elsewhere. (That's true of every email provider, unless sender and receiver have exchanged PGP keys, since email is a plaintext protocol.) I trust that they don't, based on my assessment of the available info, including discussions like this. I certainly consider them much more trustworthy than Facebook/Meta.
As a general point, I think a lot of security/privacy for services like Proton comes down to trust. It's important to keep Proton honest and to keep ourselves informed. I'm glad we have communities like this to help us do that.
Sorry I was not claiming that proton in any way was causing a problem here. I was just refuting the point that e2e means they cannot train on your inbox. I don’t even use proton but have been considering it. I do not mind the AI features.
I appreciate you pointing out the limits and pitfalls of e2e encryption. It added important nuance to the thread. Thanks!
You’re welcome. Honestly I wanted to point it out cuz I hate Facebook and WhatsApp 😂
Thanks for the correction
So that's fair and I completely understand that. My problem is 1. How training data is obtained 2. How this change in the future and 3. I just started my proton switch about two months ago and all of the google AI integration is what broke the camels back for me.
I wanted a platform where I didn't have to constantly check how the AI is getting trained and handles privacy, which is now gone.
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Mistral LLM, which I recall is open source
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probably not much, since they're not doing a cloud service. You still have to set this up to work on your local server/computer if you want to use it.
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The local AI integration is, so far, the only AI use they seem to be planning on giving. And as they covered, it's primarily designed for businesses. Other things they are planning on looking into that are not AI related is a web browser, possibly from scratch, but the AI stuff is using an existing model, it's not from scratch.
VPN Linux client is still barely functional years later...
Keep releasing new products tho
How is it barely functional? I use it and haven't had any issues.
Not the same teams.
And who's responsible for keeping the different teams properly staffed and funded?
No thank you.
Please review the plans model, it is very wallet aggressive currently. Example the ability to create customer own plans with the services he wants and needs.
very wallet aggressive
I see you used this new AI to jazz up the word "expensive"!
Not my mother tongue . And I like to invent expressions . Anyway yes is very expensive, every month … even nowadays that we are being taxed to death
I like it, very poetic!
Cave u just get it though there normal paid plan? Why not?
Teams answer:
Our business audience was the most interested in a writing assistant, this is why we started gradually rolling it out starting with Business and Visionary plans. We will look into making it available to more users at a later date!
Yay!
This is the right way to do it. Kudos!
/Visionary
The negative, since I couldn't see it:
Chromium-based browser. Support for the Proton Mail desktop app will come at a later date.
Is it technically not possible on Firefox? I would've expected a large overlap between caring-about-privacy and not-running-chromium amongst your customers :/
The team states the following regarding Firefox:
Support for running language models locally is currently only available in the Firefox Nightly builds. In our testing with Firefox, we haven’t been able to get Proton Scribe to run reliably on a variety of devices. We will see how the situation evolves before adding support.
I'm good with this response. I'm a Firefox user so can't yet make use of scribe, but its a feature I didn't expect and don't have today so I'm not missing out. For others with different threat models, if they can use it and enjoy, then more power to them.
yeah, I'm a non-chromium user
I did not look at the source code but I assume this uses something like webllm, which uses webgpu that Firefox currently doesn't support as much as chromium
ungoogled chromium is a free and open-source variant of the Chromium web browser that removes all Google-specific web services. It achieves this with a series of patches applied to the Chromium codebase during the compilation process. The result is functionally similar to regular Chromium.
I've read good things about Vivaldi, which also is chromium based.
Even if degoogled, Chromium still does a poor job at protecting your privacy.
I liked Vivaldi. Its a good browser. I just switched to Firefox because the world needs more than a chromium browser owner by a single company.
No thanks
What are the Visionary, Lifetime, and Business plans?
Proton plans explained: https://proton.me/support/proton-plans
Proton business plans explained: https://proton.me/support/proton-for-business
A Lifetime plan is functionally identical to a Visionary plan, just without any monthly cost.
Lifetime plan is a plan they auction off for a fundraiser