Andy Yen: Think your email's private? Think again

358,469 views ・ 2015-03-06

TED


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00:13
Twenty-five years ago, scientists at CERN created the World Wide Web.
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Since then, the Internet has transformed the way we communicate,
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the way we do business, and even the way we live.
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In many ways,
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the ideas that gave birth to Google, Facebook, Twitter, and so many others,
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have now really transformed our lives,
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and this has brought us many real benefits such as a more connected society.
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However, there are also some downsides to this.
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Today, the average person has an astounding amount
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of personal information online,
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and we add to this online information every single time we post on Facebook,
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each time we search on Google,
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and each time we send an email.
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Now, many of us probably think,
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well, one email, there's nothing in there, right?
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But if you consider a year's worth of emails,
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or maybe even a lifetime of email,
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collectively, this tells a lot.
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It tells where we have been, who we have met,
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and in many ways, even what we're thinking about.
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And the more scary part about this is our data now lasts forever,
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so your data can and will outlive you.
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What has happened is that we've largely lost control over our data
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and also our privacy.
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So this year, as the web turns 25,
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it's very important for us to take a moment
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and think about the implications of this.
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We have to really think.
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We've lost privacy, yes,
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but actually what we've also lost is the idea of privacy itself.
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If you think about it,
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most of us here today probably remember what life was like before the Internet,
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but today, there's a new generation
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that is being taught from a very young age to share everything online,
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and this is a generation that is not going to remember when data was private.
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So we keep going down this road, 20 years from now,
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the word 'privacy' is going to have a completely different meaning
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from what it means to you and I.
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So, it's time for us to take a moment and think,
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is there anything we can do about this?
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And I believe there is.
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Let's take a look at one of the most widely used forms of communication
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in the world today: email.
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Before the invention of email, we largely communicated using letters,
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and the process was quite simple.
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You would first start by writing your message on a piece of paper,
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then you would place it into a sealed envelope,
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and from there, you would go ahead and send it
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after you put a stamp and address on it.
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Unfortunately, today,
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when we actually send an email, we're not sending a letter.
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What you are sending, in many ways, is actually a postcard,
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and it's a postcard in the sense that everybody that sees it
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from the time it leaves your computer to when it gets to the recipient
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can actually read the entire contents.
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So, the solution to this has been known for some time,
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and there's many attempts to do it.
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The most basic solution is to use encryption,
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and the idea is quite simple.
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First, you encrypt the connection
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between your computer and the email server.
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Then, you also encrypt the data as it sits on the server itself.
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But there's a problem with this,
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and that is, the email servers also hold the encryption keys,
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so now you have a really big lock with a key placed right next to it.
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But not only that, any government could lawfully ask for
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and get the key to your data,
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and this is all without you being aware of it.
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So the way we fix this problem is actually relatively easy, in principle:
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You give everybody their own keys,
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and then you make sure the server doesn't actually have the keys.
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This seems like common sense, right?
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So the question that comes up is, why hasn't this been done yet?
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Well, if we really think about it,
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we see that the business model of the Internet today
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really isn't compatible with privacy.
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Just take a look at some of the biggest names on the web,
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and you see that advertising plays a huge role.
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In fact, this year alone, advertising is 137 billion dollars,
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and to optimize the ads that are shown to us,
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companies have to know everything about us.
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They need to know where we live,
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how old we are, what we like, what we don't like,
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and anything else they can get their hands on.
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And if you think about it,
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the best way to get this information is really just to invade our privacy.
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So these companies aren't going to give us our privacy.
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If we want to have privacy online,
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what we have to do is we've got to go out and get it ourselves.
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For many years, when it came to email,
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the only solution was something known as PGP,
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which was quite complicated and only accessible to the tech-savvy.
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Here's a diagram that basically shows
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the process for encrypting and decrypting messages.
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So needless to say, this is not a solution for everybody,
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and this actually is part of the problem,
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because if you think about communication,
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by definition, it involves having someone to communicate with.
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So while PGP does a great job of what it's designed to do,
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for the people out there who can't understand how to use it,
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the option to communicate privately simply does not exist.
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And this is a problem that we need to solve.
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So if we want to have privacy online,
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the only way we can succeed is if we get the whole world on board,
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and this is only possible if we bring down the barrier to entry.
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I think this is actually the key challenge that lies in the tech community.
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What we really have to do is work and make privacy more accessible.
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So last summer, when the Edward Snowden story came out,
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several colleagues and I decided to see if we could make this happen.
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At that time, we were working at the European Organization for Nuclear Research
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at the world's largest particle collider, which collides protons, by the way.
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We were all scientists, so we used our scientific creativity
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and came up with a very creative name for our project:
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ProtonMail. (Laughter)
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Many startups these days actually begin in people's garages
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or people's basements.
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We were a bit different.
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We started out at the CERN cafeteria,
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which actually is great, because look,
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you have all the food and water you could ever want.
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But even better than this is that every day
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between 12 p.m. and 2 p.m., free of charge,
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the CERN cafeteria comes with several thousand scientists and engineers,
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and these guys basically know the answers to everything.
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So it was in this environment that we began working.
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What we actually want to do is we want to take your email
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and turn it into something that looks more like this,
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but more importantly, we want to do it in a way
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that you can't even tell that it's happened.
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So to do this, we actually need a combination of technology
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and also design.
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So how do we go about doing something like this?
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Well, it's probably a good idea not to put the keys on the server.
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So what we do is we generate encryption keys on your computer,
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and we don't generate a single key, but actually a pair of keys,
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so there's an RSA private key and an RSA public key,
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and these keys are mathematically connected.
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So let's have a look and see how this works
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when multiple people communicate.
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So here we have Bob and Alice, who want to communicate privately.
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So the key challenge is to take Bob's message
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and to get it to Alice in such a way that the server cannot read that message.
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So what we have to do is we have to encrypt it
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before it even leaves Bob's computer,
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and one of the tricks is, we encrypt it using the public key from Alice.
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Now this encrypted data is sent through the server to Alice,
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and because the message was encrypted using Alice's public key,
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the only key that can now decrypt it is a private key that belongs to Alice,
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and it turns out Alice is the only person that actually has this key.
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So we've now accomplished the objective,
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which is to get the message from Bob to Alice
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without the server being able to read what's going on.
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Actually, what I've shown here is a highly simplified picture.
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The reality is much more complex
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and it requires a lot of software that looks a bit like this.
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And that's actually the key design challenge:
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How do we take all this complexity, all this software,
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and implement it in a way that the user cannot see it.
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I think with ProtonMail, we have gotten pretty close to doing this.
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So let's see how it works in practice.
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Here, we've got Bob and Alice again,
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who also want to communicate securely.
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They simply create accounts on ProtonMail,
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which is quite simple and takes a few moments,
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and all the key encryption and generation
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is happening automatically in the background
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as Bob is creating his account.
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Once his account is created, he just clicks "compose,"
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and now he can write his email like he does today.
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So he fills in his information,
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and then after that, all he has to do is click "send,"
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and just like that, without understanding cryptography,
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and without doing anything different from how he writes email today,
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Bob has just sent an encrypted message.
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What we have here is really just the first step,
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but it shows that with improving technology,
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privacy doesn't have to be difficult, it doesn't have to be disruptive.
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If we change the goal from maximizing ad revenue to protecting data,
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we can actually make it accessible.
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Now, I know a question on everybody's minds is,
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okay, protecting privacy, this is a great goal,
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but can you actually do this
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without the tons of money that advertisements give you?
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And I think the answer is actually yes,
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because today, we've reached a point
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where people around the world really understand how important privacy is,
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and when you have that, anything is possible.
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Earlier this year,
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ProtonMail actually had so many users that we ran out of resources,
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and when this happened, our community of users got together
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and donated half a million dollars.
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So this is just an example of what can happen
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when you bring the community together towards a common goal.
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We can also leverage the world.
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Right now,
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we have a quarter of a million people that have signed up for ProtonMail,
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and these people come from everywhere,
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and this really shows that privacy
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is not just an American or a European issue,
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it's a global issue that impacts all of us.
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It's something that we really have to pay attention to going forward.
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So what do we have to do to solve this problem?
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Well, first of all,
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we need to support a different business model for the Internet,
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one that does not rely entirely on advertisements
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for revenue and for growth.
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We actually need to build a new Internet
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where our privacy and our ability to control our data is first and foremost.
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But even more importantly,
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we have to build an Internet where privacy is no longer just an option
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but is also the default.
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We have done the first step with ProtonMail,
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but this is really just the first step in a very, very long journey.
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The good news I can share with you guys today,
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the exciting news, is that we're not traveling alone.
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The movement to protect people's privacy and freedom online
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is really gaining momentum,
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and today, there are dozens of projects from all around the world
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who are working together to improve our privacy.
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These projects protect things from our chat to voice communications,
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also our file storage, our online search,
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our online browsing, and many other things.
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And these projects are not backed by billions of dollars in advertising,
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but they've found support really from the people,
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from private individuals like you and I from all over the world.
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This really matters, because ultimately,
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privacy depends on each and every one of us,
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and we have to protect it now because our online data
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is more than just a collection of ones and zeros.
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It's actually a lot more than that.
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It's our lives, our personal stories,
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our friends, our families,
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and in many ways, also our hopes and our aspirations.
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We need to spend time now to really protect our right
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to share this only with people that we want to share this with,
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because without this, we simply can't have a free society.
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So now's the time for us to collectively stand up and say,
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yes, we do want to live in a world with online privacy,
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and yes, we can work together to turn this vision into a reality.
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Thank you.
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(Applause)
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