Forum Discussion
Edge continues to be the only major browser with no end-to-end sync encryption
ragingrei I may be wrong, but actually i think it's more not implemented for now than we don't want to implement it.
Because for instance the sync isn't finished on stable one, so i definitely thing they will do it later but, not forget even if they do it, some data will be accessible by Microsoft employee.
But in my end i prefer Microsoft employee than Google employee/bot, because if Microsoft screw up their privacy they have a lot to loose (since Entreprise use them), where Google read openly your data whiteout any shame.
but i really thing they will implement it later (if the US law don't forbid them before).
- ragingreiNov 09, 2020Brass Contributor
Wittycat I'm not too sure why US law would forbid them from implementing proper e2e encryption if it allows every other major browser to do it.
I agree that I would much rather a Microsoft employee have access to my browser data than a Google employee, but the fact of the matter is that unless you have a weak key, they can't, whereas Microsoft, through Edge, can.
I don't think they're going to implement it unless they receive enough pressure. The fact that they updated their privacy page to include a lot of convincing-sounding talk about encryption, without actually doing it correctly, is very discouraging. It reads to me like they're trying to weasel their way out of it.
- WittycatNov 09, 2020Iron Contributor
ragingrei For the us law i think about the earn it law and other attend from all surveillance country to break encryption.
For Microsoft i just think they need more time to finish the sync (and since they are the first a really implement correctly the passwordless it's even possible that data are already planned to be encrypted without entering a password.
but like i said on stable one, sync isn't finished so i definitely think e2ee will arrive when they will have finished and totally stabilized the sync feature.