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What are your alternatives to proton?

To replace everything. Mail, calendar, drive, vpn, password manager, documents etc. What are the pros and cons relative to proton? What are the mobile apps like? What assurances do you have they won't go full proton in the future? And other questions

54 comments
  • Self host email and nextcloud. Keepass for pw manager. I use davx5 and fossify calendar for mobile calendar. Nextcloud mobile just manages your files and doesn't have the other Nextcloud apps.

    Idc about Proton either way though. Imo if proton was fine for you before then it's fine for you now. I just prefer to have control over my own services.

  • Tuta for mail & calendar, CryptPad for cloud docs and spreadsheets, Mullvad for VPN, plus a few other random things like Disroot which offers email and some other services. There’s some overlap and duplication but I don’t want to keep all my shit in one place any more. The Tuta app is blocky but acceptable. Everything else I only view in browsers.

  • Tuta -- https://tuta.com/

    Includes mail and calendar and contacts. No files, or password management. But worth a look, if you want an encrypted solution and you're OK with using their client apps. I do, and I am and it's great, IMO.

    Their blogs say they're pro-privacy, and anti-BS, if you believe them: https://tuta.com/blog

  • Mail and calendar I'm still trying to figure out. VPN you don't need as long as you use HTTPS everywhere.

    password manager

    KeePassXC + KeePassDX

    documents

    Collabora Office + LibreOffice

    What are the pros and cons relative to proton?

    Pros: free, open source, and 100% offline with no intermediary company. Your file security is entirely in your own hands.

    Cons: you must devise your own cross-device sync system. I use Syncthing + Syncthing-Fork.

    What are the mobile apps like?

    Collabora is currently just bad lol. It's best reserved for really simple edits, if not just for viewing, with all major changes made on a desktop/laptop computer. KeePassDX isn't terrible but it can't view all the fields that the KeePassXC desktop platform can, and getting it to take PIN instead of password for vault-unlocking is really convoluted (although you'd only have to do it once).

    What assurances do you have they won't go full proton in the future?

    They're all open-source so anyone dissatisfied with the direction that the maintainers go in can fork them at any time.

54 comments