How to transfer private data securely via Gmail
Work And Study Relations / / December 19, 2019
There is a possibility of such a situation when you send email may contain information that is highly undesirable to give anyone other than a specific destination. However, often the first to read your email may not enjoy its recipient. It so happens that the overall use email as part of a whole family, or scattered people forgot where ever log out of your Google Account. Anyway, if the information is absolutely private, it can be easily and simply encrypt it, thereby making available to the uninitiated.
To help as always comes a cool Chrome, or more precisely its great expansion. Put the addon called SafeGmail, restart the browser and go to the interface guglopochty. As you can see from the screenshot, we now have available the encryption option, which is reduced to entering the secret question and answer to it (only accepted Latin). Naturally, they must know the only recipient of the message. Write a letter, put a check on encryption, we enter the question / answer and send.
If you have new mail interface, you have to temporarily return to the old.
Upon receipt of the letter will be completely unreadable (encrypted) form, and the text will additionally contain a reference to decrypt the message. In accordance with the guidance in the body of the email, copy the encrypted message to the clipboard and go to the link.
We enter the answer to your secret question.
Have access to the decryption interface, insert to the ciphertext and decryption push button.
That's all.
Obviously, the advantage of this expansion as compared to described earlier is no need to install add-recipient emails, as well as the lack of binding to the recipient's mail service. Any pre-setting is also absent.
SafeGmail | Chrome Web Store