ProtonMail Launches a Shorter Email Domain and Other New Features for Encryption Lovers

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An encrypted email service widely used among journalists and political dissidents just got several new sick features, including, let’s be honest, the only thing we really care about: a shorter domain name.

ProtonMail users can now activate a @pm.me domain name and use it with the same @protonmail.com email account they already have.

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“Ever since ProtonMail launched, people have asked us for a shorter domain name since some feel that ‘protonmail.com’ is too long,” the company said in a blog announcing the updates. “On our user feedback forum, thousands of people have voted for this. We’re excited to finally make this possible.”

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This is biggest update to ProtonMail, which uses end-to-end encryption and open source cryptography, since December, when it rolled out a new bridge tool that allowed users to integrate with Thunderbird, Microsoft Outlook, and Apple Mail, a change the company hoped would bring many new users into the fold—mostly those who haven’t learned PGP but remain interested in the security strong email encryption affords.

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“No longer is email encryption limited to just the tech-savvy and advanced users,” ProtonMail co-founder Dr. Andy Yen said at the time.

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ProtonMail has also rolled out new calendar event previews, meaning users won’t have to download calendar event attachments to see what’s in them; you can also now merge contacts if, say, you have two contact entries for the same person and want to clean up your address book; and they now support right-to-left languages such as Arabic, Hebrew, Farsi, and others.

To top it off, ProtonMail now has a quick command palette (accessible via shift + spacebar) that allows users to type in commands like “open composer” or “mark as read.” It looks pretty nifty.

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ProtonMail offers free secure email accounts and also runs a VPN service, which unlike Facebook, promises not to log your browsing history.

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